A trip to Disney World is an excellent way to spend your birthday, which is exactly what six-year-old Jermaine Bell’s family had planned to do. That is, until he decided to donate his birthday savings to help Hurricane Dorian evacuees.

Bell’s family had been saving up for a special trip to Disney World for his seventh birthday on Sep. 8, but instead this incredibly generous little boy decided to use the money to feed those evacuating from Dorian in South Carolina. Over Labor Day weekend, mandatory evacuations were given to South Carolina residents along the state’s 190-mile coast.

“The people that are traveling to go to places, I wanted them to have some food to eat, so they can enjoy the ride to the place that they’re going to stay at,” Bell told WJBF.

As evacuees travelled along Highway 125 in Allendale, South Carolina Bell and his family stood on the side of the road with handmade signs passing out hot dogs, chips and water. They ended up serving almost 100 evacuees. “I wanted to be generous and live to give,” Bell said.

Bell still hopes to make it to Disney World to celebrate his birthday and clearly that would be a well-deserved celebration. His mom Lauren plans to make that wish come true. “He has a very big heart and all-around caring spirit. It definitely makes it a birthday to remember for him,” she shared on Facebook.

—Shahrzad Warkentin

Featured photo: ChasinDatPaperMedia via YouTube

 

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Lilly Jordan wasn’t going to let chemotherapy ruin her chances to see the Jonas Brothers. Even though the teen couldn’t leave Penn State Children’s Hospital to go to the Hershey, Pennsylvania show, she still got an evening filled with all the Nick, Joe and Kevin she could ask for!

Jordan, who was supposed to go to the Hershey area Jonas Brothers show, shared an Instagram post, inviting the pop starts to pop in and visit her. The post got plenty of attention (even from state congressman Scott Perry) and eventually made its way to the brothers themselves.

Not only did the Jonas Brothers see the post, but they stopped by the teen’s hospital room before their show. In a video clip from the visit, Joe said, “We saw your message, we had to come over.” Nick added, “Do you have a favorite song that we can dedicate to you?”—to which Jordan replied, “Definitely S.O.S.”

Luckily, Nick’s new bride, wife Priyanka Chopra Jonas, tagged along on the visit. Chopra Jonas offered to send Jordan a video of the performance!

—Erica Loop

Featured photo: Penn State Health Hershey via Instagram 

 

 

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Photo: Melanie Forstall

To the new moms who didn’t feel joy when their baby was first born: It’s okay, I didn’t either.

When I was pregnant for my first child, I wanted nothing more than to feel prepared. So much of what was happening to my body was out of my control, so the natural response for me was to gather as much information as possible. My husband and I participated in every single class offered by the hospital. I read as many books as humanly possible. I talked with everyone I knew, which may have proven to be a problem.

At the time I felt lucky to be surrounded by so many women. I worked in a field that was dominated by women so I had countless mothers and grandmothers surrounding me. Each one was available to hear me out with endless questions, musings, or general pregnancy conversation. They were also willing to offer, solicited or not, advice and ideas of what to expect.

It’s going to be so incredibly magical.

It’s going to be a joy like you’ve never felt.

As soon as they place that baby on your chest, you are forever changed!

The love is instant!

I went into labor naturally. My first contraction came at 6:00 a.m. and things progressed onward from there. The first half of the day was relaxing; I was comfortable and labor was moving right along. I didn’t need any interventions so the doctors essentially let things happen as they should.

I didn’t have much interaction with the medical staff because for one, they saw me as a competent woman without any issues and my labor was moving at a healthy pace. That’s super, except I probably needed someone to assure me that what I was experiencing was normal. I began going through the transition. First the tears. So many tears. Then the desire to get out of the hospital. I was begging my husband to just get me out of there. Then came the vomiting. All of the vomiting.

By the time I was ready to push my epidural had essentially worn off. The only part of my body that remained numb was my right thigh; not very helpful with what I was about to do. I pushed without a working epidural for about an hour and delivered my baby girl. They placed her on my chest and as I gazed into her face, my eyes blurred with tears, I searched for the joy. I searched for the spark. I listened intently for the chorus of birds that were supposed to be singing with glory and glee.

I was supposed to then watch as they measured, bathed, and swaddled my newborn, but instead I was frozen with fear. I was hemorrhaging. I remember hearing lots of medical talk, intertwined with the cries of my daughter. I remember seeing my husband sway in between two worlds—the joy of new fatherhood and the fear of what was happening with his wife.

After three medical interventions, the doctor was able to stop the bleeding. I was reintroduced to my baby girl and to my surprise she latched on immediately. I remember the nurses encouraging me to be happy about this development. I wanted to be happy, but I also wanted a sandwich.

For the next twelve hours, I sat semi-upright, nursing my baby. I dozed here and there but never actually slept. The day she was born blurred into the following day and I wasn’t sure exactly where the time had gone. I was still searching her face for the joy I was supposed to be feeling.

They all said it would be miraculous. They all said it would be joyous. They all said I would be so happy.

By the next afternoon, I wasn’t feeling any of that. The thing I was feeling the most? Tired. Sheer mental and physical exhaustion. There wasn’t a book I read that prepared me for this.

My instincts had definitely kicked in. I knew what to do for her and I felt an immediate, intense sense of protection and a deep need to care for her. I definitely loved her. I just wasn’t sure I was in love with her. I was propelled by instincts, not joy. I was enormously conflicted and this created a highly complicated set of feelings.

I felt guilty and ashamed.

My natural inclination is to talk through my feelings but in this case, I couldn’t. The time when I needed it the most, I had to hold it in. All of the people I would normally turn to, were the same people who said how great this experience would be for me. How could I possibly tell them how I was feeling? How could I tell these women that, instead of wanting to hold my baby for countless hours, I wanted to rent a hotel room for the night, sleep, and eat hot dogs?

What kind of horrible person am I?

So instead, I focused on what was in front of me. This baby nursed close to 24-hours a day, so the only thing in front of me was her. It was always her! I focused on her and meeting her needs one at a time. On the last day in the hospital, I managed to get a solid four hours of sleep. Thanks to my husband who sat in the chair and held our baby for four hours, resisting any urge to move and without flexing a single muscle.

Rest can do wonders for a new mother. So can self-acceptance.

It didn’t happen overnight, but it did happen. The joy did finally arrive. Getting home helped. Finding a routine helped. Having regular meals and resting in my own bed helped. Building confidence as a mother, and getting to know this beautiful baby really helped.

You know what also helped? Stopping the playlist. Instead of going over and over what everyone told me I should be feeling, I started listening to the things I was actually feeling.

I know the women surrounding me had the very best of intentions. Some of them may have had that immediate sense of joy and I am grateful that they shared their experiences with me. Some, I think, may have remembered it a bit wrong. Like me, they didn’t feel the joy at first either but they do remember feeling it at some point.

The truth is, for some, pure magic happens instantaneously. For others, well, it’s more like a restaurant’s soft opening. Over time, you work out the kinks and confidence builds. Things generally do get better. The magic and joy will come. It may not come right away, and that’s okay. Hell, it may not come for a while, and that’s okay too.

No matter how it happens, you are not alone. Someone along the way has felt the same feelings as you. I know it’s hard to have perspective when you are in the middle of caring for a newborn; so, if nothing else, use this thought as a lifeline to get you through—it’s hard as hell and if you don’t feel the joy right away, it’s okay. Neither did I so you are not alone.

Melanie Forstall is a full-time mother, full-time wife, full-time teacher, and never-enough-time blogger at Melanie Forstall: Stories of Life, Love, and Mothering. She holds a doctorate in education and yet those many years of schooling have proved to be utterly useless when it comes to actual mothering.

Photo: iStockphoto

It was my first day at my new job.

I was so nervous that I felt like my heart was going to jump out of my chest. I had taken a hiatus from working when we moved across the country, and I had gotten comfortable with the stay-at-home mom life. But with my son at school full-time, it was time for me to return to the workforce and help out with the family finances.

Oh wait, did I mention I was pregnant? And that my boss had no clue?

Argh. The guilt. During the interview, I had an internal battle of epic proportions in my head on whether or not to reveal my pregnancy. I was about three months pregnant at the time so I looked like I might have eaten a little too much for lunch, but my pregnant belly wasn’t immediately obvious. So it’s up to me to tell the interviewers about my pregnancy.

The law says they are not supposed to ask, and I am not obligated to tell. But I felt so dishonest like I was lying by omission. I wanted this job badly because it offered flexible hours so I could pick up my son from school. Plus, I was running out of time—I was about to start on a job when I was in my third trimester and could barely apply what I learned in my training before going on maternity leave. In the end, my fear that my pregnancy would deter the company from hiring me trumped my guilt, and I kept my mouth shut.

But maybe I shouldn’t have.

Oh wait, did I mention that this was a vape company?

As I stepped into the building on my first day of work, I was met by a cloud of smoke. There was so much smoke in the air that I had trouble seeing through it. Then I realized what was happening. O.M.G. They allow vaping inside the building! And EVERY SINGLE EMPLOYEE vaped. All except me.

I immediately ran out of the building like a bat out of hell, drawing curious and surprised looks from everyone I passed on the way out. I called my manager from outside the building, and the following conversation ensued:

Me: “Good morning! Do you mind meeting me outside the front door?”

Manager: “Why? Are the doors locked?”

Me: “No, no, I just need to talk to you about something.”

Manager: “Oh, just come to my office! Do you know where it is?”

Me: “I can’t go inside the building. Can you come out?”

Manager: “What? Why? Are you okay?”

Me: “I am pregnant.”

Manager: “OH…CRAP. I mean, wow. Stay outside. I will call you right back.”

I waited in my car anxiously for my manager’s call. I saw him run across the first floor from his office to the CEO’s office, face full of panic. Aw man, am I fired for not telling them I am pregnant? They can’t do that, can they? But how can I work in a building full of vape cloud that contains nicotine and risk harm to my baby?

After what seemed like forever (but in reality probably 30 minutes or so), my manager came out of the building with the CEO of the company. They politely asked me to go home and work from there, and not to return to the office until further notice.

For the next several days, I “worked” from home. Well, not really. I mean, I didn’t even step foot into my office yet, what work did I possibly have to do? I tried to learn as much as I could at home, but in the back of my head, I was mentally preparing to lose a job that I never really had.

My decision to not tell my hiring manager about my pregnancy during the interview kept replaying in my head. I was more than qualified for the job, and I blew the interview out of the water. Despite it being a vape company, I did not see any indication of employees vaping indoors during my interview. And as much as people are not supposed to discriminate against pregnant women, I felt like the fact that I will be taking care of a newborn within months of starting my job would have played into the hiring decision. How could it not?

At the end of the day, every day, I would get a call from my manager asking me to stay at home one more day. The top management was still discussing my case and hadn’t made a final decision yet. Lots of meetings were being held, and they had to call in the employment lawyer. Apparently, I was the first pregnant woman they ever had to deal with in the workplace so finding out I was pregnant was mind-blowing. I felt so bad that my pregnancy was turning the company upside down, but, hey, I did not expect to walk into a building full of vape cloud either.

Finally, after five days of deliberation, the management made a decision. I was told to come back to work the following Monday, but with no explanations. “Don’t worry, you will be fine,” was all I got from my manager.

So on Monday, I packed my lunch and drove to work. I carefully walked into the office, afraid to expose my baby to any more nicotine. But the air was clear. No vape cloud. What happened?

My manager pulled me into his office and told me to shut the door. He said to me in a hushed tone: “Management decided to ban vaping inside the building. We didn’t tell the employees why, so you don’t have to worry about people blaming you. We just told them that it was an executive decision that came down from the CEO to make the workplace more professional for our customers. And do not feel guilty about this, we have been tossing the idea of banning vaping inside the office for a while now. We value your work experience and your talent and if it takes banning vaping for you to come work for us, then so be it.”

Huh. Perhaps there is hope for humanity after all.

Betty Boiron is a mother of two who strives to inspire other moms to embrace motherhood as the hot mess it is. When she is not busy chasing after her kids or digging herself out of piles of laundry, you can find her writing on her blog Mombrite.

 

Actress Zoe Saldana’s house is fit for a kid. Actually, it’s fit for three kids—her four-year-old twins Cy and Bowie and two-year-old son Zen!

Saldana opened up to Architectural Digest, sharing her views on creating a family-centered home space. The actress noted that even though she grew up, “in that generation where you only had one room in the house that was for the kids and then every other room you weren’t supposed to go in, because that’s where Grandma’s china was,” her home has plenty of places for the kiddos to play.

What’s it like to live like Saldana? While she and hubby Marco Perego enjoy their home’s interior Italian ’60s modern aesthetic, they also take their children into consideration. Saldana told Architectural Digest, “I wanted to make sure that in addition to everything being beautiful and affordable and super artistic, I wanted it to be child-safe. I have three boys and they’re going to be jumping, ripping and biting. I also wanted it to be durable.”

Child-safe, affordable and durable? Yep, we totally get that!

—Erica Loop

Featured photo: Zoe Saldana via Instagram 

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Chrissy Teigen is one honest mama. When the supermodel—and super mama—recently tweeted about losing baby weight, things got real.

In a recent tweet Teigen asked herself, “how do you eat like this??” She followed up the self-directed question with an awesomely honest explanation: she just loves food too much. But that wasn’t the only amazing gem from her self-interview.

Teigen reveals in the tweet that she’s 20 pounds heavier now than before she had baby Miles 10 months ago. Along with adding that she hasn’t lost the last little bit of baby weight because of her adoration for eating, she also tweeted that she’s coming to terms with her “new normal.”

This isn’t the first time Teigen has opened up about her postpartum body. Back in September, Teigen told Women’s Health, “Since I was 20 years old, I had this weight in my mind that I am, or that I’m supposed to be. I’ve been so used to that number for 10 years now. And then I started realizing it was a swimsuit-model weight. There’s a very big difference between wanting to be that kind of fit and wanting to be happy-fit.”

So if you haven’t lost the baby weight, don’t fret; we’re loving Teigen’s refreshing approach about coming to terms with your own “new normal,” whatever that looks like to you.

—Erica Loop

Featured photo: Chrissy Teigen via Instagram 

 

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We survived Daylight Saving and lived to tell about it! Admittedly, much of this week was spent adjusting to longer days and the usual parent shenanigans. Keep reading for our roundup of how Twitter parents survived the last week.

1. But seriously.

2. Let the games begin!

https://twitter.com/MelissaBeagley/status/1104914823081390080

3. And that we’re both super!

4. Nope.

5. DO YOU KNOW!?

6. Is that so much to ask?

7. Everyone needs a hobby!

8. It’s going to be a long day.

9. Thank you, daylight saving.

10. Yeah, so there’s that.

––Karly Wood

photo: Ryan McGuire via Gratisography; composite by Karly Wood for Red Tricycle

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Anything that convinces your family to take more responsibility at home is worth a shot. However, one mom’s parenting hack backfired, proving that it’s going to take more than a quick fix to solve a problem that many moms face daily.

Mom Miranda Crimbring came up with a clever trick to get her kids and husband to clean up and pitch in with the house work. Unfortunately, her plan backfired—and instead of encouraging her family to help, it perfectly illustrated the idea that moms are more likely to be bear the brunt of invisible labor.

In a Facebook post, Crimbring shared a picture of a small scrap of paper with a $5 bill taped to the back of it. As she explains in the post, she left the paper scrap on the bathroom floor to see how long it would take her family to pick it up and discover the money underneath.

“Well, while trying to prove a point to my kids, we’ve just surpassed the 48-hour mark of the ‘who will pick up the random piece of trash that they KNOW isn’t supposed to be there’ challenge,” she wrote in the caption. “Between the kids and the husband, and multiple trips in and out of the bathroom, this little piece of heaven may just be in it for the long haul!”

While her clever parenting hack failed miserably it serves a much bigger purpose as an important reminder of the under-appreciated tasks mom perform daily, also known as invisible labor.

—Shahrzad Warkentin

Featured photo: Volha Flaxeco via Unsplash

 

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Counting down from five, check out these strategies for launching this “love-ly” month with your little one.

5. Make everyday routines special.

When my kids were toddlers, they loved it when I ran the bath, switched on a few flashlights (far from their little hands) and turned off the overhead light. We called it a “Spooky Bath.” Even now, when I don’t want to do dishes, we have a “picnic”—and sit on a blanket in the living room eating off paper plates. These little moments, even though they happen only once in a while, have become some of their favorite memories.

4. Notice what makes your child special—and tell them.

“I love how you found that tiny little bug on the sidewalk. I would have missed it if you didn’t show me.” Or: “I noticed how you really stuck with that puzzle. You are really persistent—I appreciate that about you.”

3. Show yourself some love!

I know this list is supposed to be all about the kids, but hear me out: I’ve learned that I need to work hard to silence the voice in my head that’s constantly telling me how I messed up dealing with the last tantrum or that I’m  not a great mom or that I fail at parenting because I lack the patience of Mary Poppins.

I’m learning to treat myself like I’d treat a friend: everyone messes up. Take a deep breath and try again. That child loves you and you love her. So you had a misstep. It’s the next step that matters. Yes, re-programming yourself is hard. But a healthier parent is a more peaceful parent. And more peace means you have more head space for enjoying life with your little one.

2. Give your child a sense of family connection.

Share pictures and tell stories about you as a child—stories about growing up, your siblings and your childhood adventures (my kids’ favorite story is about when I fell and broke my arm in 5th grade and rode in an ambulance). Not close to your family? Share stories of friends and mentors. Help your child see that they are part of something bigger.

1. Focus on the long game.

It’s easy to get caught up in daily struggles, stresses and worries. But focusing on the long game means remembering that there is only one thing your child really needs: You. This doesn’t mean you can’t set a limit. This doesn’t mean you need to give your child a million toys and a pony. But it does mean that you are there when you’re with them, you notice and respond to their cues, you comfort when comforting’s needed and you listen (even to long recaps of Paw Patrol).

These moments are the long game, because they help you build a relationship with your child that will stay strong way past the baby and toddler years.

Happy Valentine’s Day!

This post originally appeared on ZERO TO THREE.

As a mom, I know parenting has joys and challenges. As a child development expert, I take the research and science on the first three years and make it work for real parents. That’s the magic at ZERO TO THREE, where our focus is giving young children a strong start. 

What mom isn’t looking for 100th Day of School ideas that don’t take an exorbitant number of hours to create? Well, one super-smart mama found a completely creative way to get around the whole counting thing. Read on for this oh-so-useful parenting/school hack you need to know about.

We’ve all been there. The 100th Day is creeping up and your kiddo is charged with bringing in 100 of something. Anything. And most likely, whatever they choose is tiny, hard to handle and epically tricky to count. Ugh. Oh and did we mention that even though your child is supposed to actually count the marbles, Cheerios, toy cars, crayons, pom poms or pen tops they’ve chosen to bring in, you’re the one doing the real math work. Double ugh.

Photo: Amazon

Of course along with wanting you to do all the work, your kiddo probably waited until the night of the 99th day of school to remind you about this massive project. And that’s exactly what happened to Florida mom Rachel Ellsworth. In an interview with TODAY, Ellsworth said, “The night before the 100th day of school, my daughter reminds me at bedtime — of course, at bedtime — that she needs to bring 100 items to school the next day.” Yep, sounds about right.

So what did Ellsworth do? After scavenging her home for anything she had 100 of to no avail, she hit the kitchen. “I was rummaging through the pantry when I saw my 100 calorie packs of Oreo crisps…my daughter thought it was hilarious and her teacher thought I was a genius. It also doubled as her snack that day.” That’s right. The absolutely genius mom used 100 calories as 100 “items” for the 100th Day celebration. Now that’s pure inspiration!

—Erica Loop

Featured Photo: Pragyan Bezbaruah via Pexels 

 

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