The great thing about babies is that they’re easily entertained, which is especially helpful when you’re trying to build a connection between your tot and their older sibling. Babes are obsessed with everything their siblings do, and bigs take great pleasure in making their babies laugh, or showing off their “reading” skills with their favorite nursery rhymes. So before your tot becomes a toddler and turns your big kid’s world upside down, your baby can start bonding with their older sibling by playing sweet and silly games together. These budding connections will only grow as your kiddos get bigger. From classics like peekaboo to anything-goes dance parties, here are our favorite sibling activities for big kids and babies.

1. Peekaboo

This old favorite is a classic for a reason! Peekaboo is an easy, surefire way for an older sibling to put a smile on baby’s face. To add an extra twist to the game, get out a lightweight blanket that your older kid can drape over their head, and then let your little one take off the blanket. Big kids can also play peekaboo with favorite stuffies, hiding them behind their backs before the big reveal. Ta-da!

2. Making the Band

Kids of all ages love to rock out. Gather up musical instrumentsxylophones, rattles, even ukuleles for the big kidsand encourage your kids to make beautiful music together. If you don’t have instruments, break out the pots and pans and wooden spoons. If your budding musicians want to make their own instruments, dig into the recycling bin: Make a drum out of an oatmeal canister or a shaker by putting beans in a toilet paper tube and taping over each end. You can find more baby Mozart-worthy DIY instrument ideas here.

3. To the Races

Encourage mobile kids to get out their wiggles and race each other across the living room. To even things out, big kids can do a crab walk or walk backwards while little ones crawl or scoot. Ready, set, go!

photo: Edward Cisneros via Unsplash

4. Mirror, Mirror on the Wall

Babies adore seeing facesespecially when they belong to beloved older siblings. Big kids can pretend to be mirrors and mimic their little siblings’ expressions, or make an exaggerated face and see if their baby sibling can do the same. The eye contact siblings make when they’re playing a mirror game helps to strengthen their bond as future besties.

5. Echo

The imitation game can also be played with sounds: Have the older sibling mimic the coos and noises their little sibling makes. For a twist, your big kid can even extend those oohs and aahs into words. This back-and-forth is how babies learn to talk and take turns in conversations, so by playing this game your older sibling is creating the building blocks for your baby’s future babbling!

6. Patty Cake

Rhymes, hand-clapping games, and finger-play classics are always a sibling playtime hit. Your older child can teach their little new tricks with patty cake, or throw other preschool favorites, like the Itsy Bitsy Spider or Five Little Monkeys, into the mix.

7. Story Time

Long before kids can read, they memorize their favorite picture books. Older siblings feel oh-so-grown-up when they “read” these books to baby siblings. Don’t worry if your child doesn’t know all the words yet; just reciting the beginning, middle, and end of the story will entertain their younger sibling. To make the story time a little extra special, add puppets, like these from the Etsy shop Frankly Fun Felt ($18).

8. Made You Laugh

Is there anything better than baby giggles? Challenge big brothers and sisters to make the baby laugh without touching them. They can try funny faces, silly dances, pretending to be an elephant, putting their shoes on their head…. Anything goes!

photo: Jens Johnsson via Unsplash

9. Keep It Rolling

Rolling a ball back and forth is an easy introduction to taking turns, and kids can play this game together almost as soon as little ones are sitting up on their own. Easy-to-grab balls like this one from Oball ($5) help baby play the game. Big and little siblings can also roll cars or trains back and forth. Pro tip: Rolling two similar toys back and forth at once makes taking turns a little easier because each kiddo will have a toy to hold onto at all times.

10. Dance Party

Put on your favorite tunes, pull out some gauzy scarves, and get a dance party started. To make it extra special, just add bubbles. Give your baby a rattle if they aren’t quite big enough for a full-body boogie. We guarantee it’ll give you a few minutes of peaceand you might be inspired to join in the fun.

Make sure to capture all those sweet bonding moments—and share them with your family and friends near and far—with the Tinybeans app. The secure platform puts parents in total control of who sees and interacts with photos and videos of their kids.

Looking for a fun hands-on activity that keeps giving? Consider making a bird feeder or two. Not only are they easy for kids to make, but it’s a low-cost project that will keep them busy. Even better, adding a bird feeder to your backyard is a great way for kids to connect with nature and develop a new hobby to fill long summer days. Break out the binoculars, future bird watchers, and consider whether a classic pine cone feeder or a recycled version made with paper and plastic is the right fit for you. We’ve got bird feeder plans for them all.

Toilet Paper Tube Bird Feeder

Creative Jewish Mom

These DIY toilet paper tube bird feeders will add a bright, happy touch to any backyard. Rescue a few toilet paper tubes from the recycling bin, add crepe paper for a festive touch, and you'll be ready to make your own in no time. Fly over to Creative Jewish Mom for step-by-step instructions.

Sunflower Bird Feeder

Snugglebug University

Snugglebug University dreamed up this sunflower-inspired bird feeder for a kids' art group—and we think it's a perfect DIY project for long summer days. The centerpiece for this clever design is a paper plate holder. Just add birdseed, nut butter and a few other materials, and you'll be ready to make your own eye-catching bird feeder in no time. Find out how at Snugglebug University.

Pine Cone Feeder

Dana Willard via MADE Everyday

The crafty chickadee over at MADE Everyday took the lead making this delicious craft. All you’ll need is a few pinecones, peanut butter, birdseed, string and about five minutes. Check out the how-to here, and use the leftover peanut butter to make your hungry birds a tasty treat.

Bird Feeder Kit in a Box

Dirt and Dazzle

If you want to make a bird feeder with your kids but don't have the energy to put together another craft project, you can order a ready-made kit with all the supplies you'll need to make two bird feeders. Dirt and Dazzle offers ready-to-ship DIY bird feeder boxes ($15) with wooden ornaments, birdseed, craft sticks and peanut butter. Bonus: these boxes make a great gift for nature-loving kids and future Audubon Society members.

Milk Carton Bird House/Feeder

Art Bar Blog

The art teacher behind Art Bar Blog came up with this easy upcycle idea for transforming an empty milk carton into a vibrant birdhouse. Utilizing the carton’s house-like shape, she added a small hole and then had her students decorate using their favorite paint colors. You’ll find a list of materials and instructions here.

Wood Birdhouse Kit

DJA Woodworks

Keep budding woodworkers busy with this DIY wood birdhouse kit. Available from Etsy shop DJA Woodworks ($20), these sturdy wooden kits come ready to assemble. Your kid can paint the rainbow birdhouse of her dreams, then put it outside for her feathered friends. Add a few sunflower seeds, and hungry birds will move right in.

Recycled Tin Can

Handmade by Kelly

This recycled craft by Handmade by Kelly adds a pop of color to any backyard. The bird won’t be able to resist stopping for a snack at this vibrant feeder. Choose your favorite hues of duct tape and head over to Momtastic to learn how to make your own.

Popsicle Stick Bird Feeder

Tonya Staab

Be sure to save the sticks from your favorite frozen treats this summer, because this popsicle stick bird feeder is super simple to make, and lots of fun to decorate. Head over to Create-Celebrate-Explore for instructions.

 

Soda Bottle Bird Feeder

Artzy Creations

The vibrant colors of this recycled bird feeder really pop against the tree’s green leaves. Made using an empty soda bottle, and assorted hues of tissue paper, you’ll find a full list of materials and the step-by-step instructions over at Artzy Creations.

 

LEGO Bird Feeder

Gary Mueller via Project Feederwatch

Your budding builder will love tackling this fun outdoor craft. When it comes to making your own version of this LEGO feeder, the experts over at Project FeederWatch advise adding drain holes, cleaning regularly and storing in a sheltered location. Visit their site for help identifying and feeding the birds in your neck of the woods.

Cookie Cutter Shape Bird Feeder

Eighteen 25

These peck-worthy ornaments were created by the crafty duo behind Eighteen25. Choose your favorite cookie cutter shapes, and head over to the blog for a list of ingredients and the tutorial.

Buttoned-Up Bird House

Mod Podge Rocks

These decorative birdhouses from Sew Country Chick are cute as a button. A little paint and an assortment of buttons are all you’ll need to add a little flair to any ordinary wooden birdhouse. Fly over to Mod Podge Rocks for the how-to.

Citrus Feeder

Handmade by Kelly

Planning to make a pitcher of fresh-squeezed orange juice or refreshing lemonade? Then be sure to save the rinds for this colorful craft from Handmade by Kelly. These sweet bird feeders are easy to make using the rinds of your favorite citrus. Find the instructions over at Mother Nature Network.

Egg Carton Feeder

The Creative Cubby

This eco-friendly bird feeder is perfect for serving the flock of feathered friends visiting your backyard this season. Head over to The Creative Cubby to learn to make this easy, recycled craft.

—Oz Spies with Lauren Hill

 

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Avoid grocery store crowds and support local businesses by getting fruits, veggies, pantry staples and more from these neighborhood restaurants-turned-markets. We will continue to update this story with additional information as it becomes available.

Burbank

Olive & Thyme

Order butter, baguettes, eggs, fruits, veggies and more for curbside pickup or delivery. Fresh farmer's market vegetable bags start at $25 for a small bag, or $40 for a fruit basket. Call for more information and to order. 

3821 Riverside Dr.
Burbank
(818)557-1560

Online: oliveandthyme.com

Culver City

Röckenwagner

The westside bakery has partnered with two California businesses, County Line Harvest and Lady and the Larder, and now offers "farmers market-fresh produce and artisan cheeses, as well as our handmade breads, pastries and reheat-able meals." Order online for pickup or delivery.

12835 Washington Blvd.
Culver City
(310)577-0747

Online: rockenwagnermarket.com

Los Feliz & Hollywood

Kismet

The popular Mediterranean spot now offers curbside pickup for grocery items including rice, dried beans, spices, nuts, veggies and fruits. They're open daily from 12p.m.-7p.m. Call to place an order, which should be ready within an hour. 

4648 Hollywood Blvd.
Los Feliz
(323)409-0404

Online: kismetla.com

Gwen

Curtis Stone's butcher shop and restaurant is delivering all over LA. Call or email to place an order for meats, dairy, fresh produce, beer and wine, and more. See a sample menu here.

6600 Sunset Blvd.
Los Angeles
(323)946-7513

Online: gwenla.com

San Fernando Valley

The Sherman

Shop The Sherman's online store for produce, dairy, grains and meat. They also have paper towels! And wine. Lots of wine.

14633 Ventura Blvd.
Sherman Oaks
(818)485-2200

Online: theshermanla.com

Petit Trois

Starting Wed., Apr. 8, Petit Trois launches Petit Trois Goods at its valley location. While the dairy and dry goods prices are steep, check out the produce selection for a range of offerings and shop to support local farms.  

13705 Ventura Blvd.
Sherman Oaks

Online: petittrois.com/goods/

Santa Monica

Birdie G's

The Santa Monica restaurant, known for its cocktails and comfort food, has opened its kitchen cupboards and deli cases to locals, offering sliced meats, pickled items and so many dry goods—from artisan matzo to rye flour. Call to place a pickup order daily from 12p.m.-7p.m.

2421 Michigan Ave.
Santa Monica
(310)310-3616

Online: birdiegsla.com

Huckleberry Cafe

Farmers Market Boxes are $30 this week and available on a first-come first-serve basis! Guarantee your box by calling us at 310-451-2311 from 9am-3pm at least 2 days in advance. Follow Huckleberry on Instagram for the cafe's latest offerings.

Multiple Locations

Tender Greens

Get free local delivery on order over $70 from various Tender Greens locations all around town. Added bonus? Many of the pre-packaged produce and grocery boxes come with a roll of toilet paper while supplies last. Options include a pantry box (with bread, pasta, salami, tomato sauce and more), fruit and veggie boxes and even an indoor picnic box (with three bottles of wine—just in case your stock is running low). 

Online: tendergreens.com

Dog Haus

In addition to offering the regular menu of dogs and burgers, several Dog Haus outposts also offer market items like eggs, dinner rolls and even toilet paper. Participating locations include Pasadena, Canoga Park and Northridge. Click here for the full list.

–Shannan Rouss

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Challenge yourself or your kids to break a world record. Guinness World Records is looking to support families staying home by expanding their digital portfolio and taking record-breaking indoors. With all this extra time on our hands, why not become a world record holder? 

View this post on Instagram

We've seen the #StayAtHomeChallenge, but are you ready to raise the bar? 🤔🧻⁣ ⁣ We're on the look out for the best toilet-roll-keeper-upper in the world!⁣ ⁣ With the ongoing changes around the globe, we want everyone to be able to stay inspired and have fun, while staying inside.⁣ ⁣ That's why we’re pleased to bring you the #GWRChallenge, a weekly record challenge we will be hosting across Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and TikTok.⁣ ⁣ A record holder will be announced every following Monday - but what do you have to do for this week's challenge? ⁣ ⁣ Simply follow our guidelines here: ⁣ ⁣ 1. Any brand-new fully raveled unused toilet roll can be used.⁣ 2. Make sure you’re standing for the attempt and after a 3,2,1 countdown start kicking the toilet roll on the feet or bouncing on your head. You can then use any part of your body to juggle the toilet roll except your arms and hands.⁣ 3. Make sure the toilet roll remains in the air between touches and if it hits the floor, a wall, a chair or anything else during the attempt the attempt ends.⁣ 4. IMPORTANT - Please use the toilet roll after the attempt and don’t let it go to waste (they're a precious commodity!)⁣ ⁣ We’re excited to see your best submissions and can’t wait to see who will become Officially Amazing!™⁣ ⁣ Link in bio and stories for more information! ⁣ ⁣ ---------------------------------------------------------⁣ #guinnessworldrecords #challenge #toiletpaper #toiletpaperchallenge #stayathome #stayhome #records #recordbreaking #new #breaking #trythisathome #athomeactivities

A post shared by Guinness World Records (@guinnessworldrecords) on

Become a record holder at home with #GWRChallenge. This weekly record challenge will be hosted across Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and TikTok. 

Every Monday, a new challenge will be announced. All you have to do is follow a simple set of rules for each record.mAlso on Monday, the #GWRChallenge from the week before will conclude and the record holder will be named at the end of the week.

There are a few things you can do to ensure your attempt gets recognized.

  1. Be sure to follow ALL rules
  2. Tag Guinness World Records and use #GWRChallenge
  3. Call out the number or score you’ve achieved in your caption

All attempts utilize household materials, making this an exciting and accessible record-breaking experience for anyone who wants to try. Challenge #1 involved toilet paper! 

—Jennifer Swartvagher

Featured photo: Guinness World Records via Instagram 

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Schools are closed, you’re working from home, and, let’s face it, the store shelves are pretty bare. All you want is a hot meal you dodn’t have to cook and maybe a few minutes out of the house. Luckily, local eateries are pulling together just like the rest of us. Check out these six places that will feed your kids for free when you place your order for curbside pickup.

photo: Guillermo Vuljevas via Pixabay

Good Stuff Eatery

Delicious burgers and fries are the comfort foods we’re craving and Good Stuff Eatery is one of the best places to get a hand-crafted burger. Add a hand spun shake or a float to round out the meal for an at-home indulgence. ! Not in the mood for a burger? Make any burger a chicken sandwich or order one of their fresh salads instead. For each adult meal, you can get up to two kid meals for free! Their Capitol Hill location is open daily 11 a.m. – 10 p.m. Georgetown is open Mon. – Sat. 11:30 a.m. – 10 p.m. and Sun. 11:30 a.m. – 9 p.m.

Capitol Hill
303 Pennsylvania Ave SE
202-543-8222

Georgetown
3291 M St NW
202-337-4663

Online: www.goodstuffeatery.com

photo: iStock

 

We, The Pizza

We, The Pizza has you covered for hot, melty goodness. Add some knots, wings, and a soda or two, and you’ve got dinner in an instant. With pizza by the slice, or a whole medium or large pie, you can make sure everyone has exactly what they want. All pick-up orders are part of their “kids eat free” program during the crisis. They’re open daily 11 a.m. – 11 p.m.

305 Pennsylvania Ave. SE
202-544-4008
Online: www.wethepizza.com

chicken tacos
photo: Jakub Kapusnak via Foodies Feed

Santa Rosa Taqueria

Nachos, tacos, burritos, just the thought makes your mouth water, doesn’t it? Sometimes Mexican food is the best comfort food, and Santa Rosa Taqueria offers up some of the best around. They’ve also got salads, quesadillas, and a variety of bowls. Try something different every day! With each adult meal purchased for pickup, you can get two kid meals for free. Their hours are Mon. – Sat. 11 a.m. – 10 p.m.

315 Pennsylvania Ave. SE
202-450-4800
Online: www.santarosataqueria.com

photo: iStock

Brookland Pint

This restaurant takes curbside pickup to the next level: you can add one of 24 lines of beer to your takeout order! They offer quesadillas, salads, sandwiches and burgers, all done to order. Their kid’s menu is perfect for kids, with traditional kid favorites like hot dogs and mac & cheese. Got a kiddo or two with a small appetite? Order from the Everyday Sides & Small Appetites kid’s menu instead! You get one free kid meal with each adult meal purchased. Their hours are 5 p.m – 10 p.m.

Insider’s tip: they’ll also give you a free roll of toilet paper with your order!

716 Monroe St NE
202-758-2757
Online: www.brooklandpint.com

photo: iStock

Meridian Pint

Meridian Pint, like its sister restaurant Brookland Pint, takes takeout food to a whole new level with beer to-go.  Their menu is hearty with lots of filling meals. From burgers to sandwiches, salads to pasta, you can find something for everyone. Don’t forget dessert! Their Avery’s Thin Mint Cheesecake is made with Girl Scout cookies bought from local troop 60076. You can get a free kid meal with each adult meal purchased. They are currently open 5 p.m. – 8 p.m. daily.

Insider’s tip: A free roll of toilet paper is included with all orders.

6035 Wilson Blvd
Arlington, VA 22205
703-300-9655
Online: www.meridianpint.com

Photo by tookapic from Pixabay

Sticky Rice

Sushi lovers can still indulge with curbside pickup at Sticky Rice. Their usual menu is available, including alcohol and the kid’s menu. Pick your favorites and let your mouth water as you imagine the delicious flavors and textures when you sink your teeth into them.

Sticky Rice is allowing kids to eat free every day from the kid’s menu with each adult order. Plus, if you order a sushi roll, you can get a free roll of toilet paper.

They’re open Sun. – Wed. 11:30 a.m. – 11 p.m., and Thurs. – Sat. 11:30 a.m. – 2:00 a.m. That makes them perfect for satisfying a late night craving!

1224 H St NE
202-397-7655
Online: www.stickyricedc.com

—Wendy Miller

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I feel like my 4-year-old nephew wrote this story: “There will be a virus that will scare the whole world, a lot of people will suffer, schools will be closed and the world will run out of toilet paper.” Who would have thought that year 2020 is going to start out like this!

It is not an understatement to say 2020 is going to be a defining year in many ways for all of us. This year put family, life, and staying healthy into focus like never before. As we all get into the groove of working from home, cooking three meals a day, online classes for the kids and social distancing, we also need to pay attention to staying sane, healthy and reaching out to those who are alone and could potentially be impacted by social distancing more than many of us.

Extroverts, like me, are going to have a hard time being in isolation and not being able to interact with people face to face. We tend to get our energy through these interactions. If your kid is an extrovert and thrives in the company, they will also face similar issues. Please be mindful of this and figure out ways to give them social interactions.

How can you handle all this from home? You have plenty of useful tips on the web on how to work from home, set a routine, and manage day-to-day activity without losing your mind. Here are some tips from us at S’moresUp on how you can make it fun and a better experience for kids.

  • Do a brainstorming session with the kids to come up with fun activities for the family. Ask everyone to come up with ideas and vote on it. We came up with a bunch of ideas in our family like family potluck (where each one of us will make a dish for dinner), scavenger hunt in the house, jumping jack competition, etc. Reserve time in the evening every day to do this together. These all can go to the Rewards section in the S’moresUp app.
  • Set up daily and weekly chores for the kids. Make it a competition if you have more than one kid and reward them weekly. Movie choices, a virtual hangout for an hour with a friend of their choice, they get to set a menu for a day, they get to be the adult in the house for the day (play the role of dad or mom), etc.
  • Daily family workout time. Do simple workouts together. Keep them active.
  • Set up a time for them everyday to hang out with some friends via Google Hangout or FaceTime. There is a chrome extension called ‘Netflix Party’ that you can use where they can watch a movie together and chat at the same time. Give that a try.
  • Set up their calendar and help them plan, so they know what their day looks like. Put in everything from playtime, workout time, virtual playdate time in the schedule. Given them a structure and set expectations for the week.

Social distancing is essential, but you can still take them on a drive. If allowed by local government, go out for a run. Walk the dog. Make sure that they get some fresh air.

You can get playful with the family wall. Put up a surprise game for them for the day like a scavenger hunt. Start a friendly challenge with your neighbor using Family Circle or send virtual hugs and kisses to your ones.

For more ideas and tools on how to stay organized, stay informed, and stay connected, check out www.smoresup.com.

Priya Rajendran  is a developer and “Silicon Valley tech mom” who’s created S’moresUp an innovative iPhone and Android solution to the problems of managing family’s day to day life, with over 100,000 moms and dads already on board.  She’s a technology veteran who lead the team behind Paypal's Wallet.

 

Photo: Fiona Britten

To those of you who haven’t gone into full “shelter in place” yet, 20 tips from your friend on the other side:

1. Your local pharmacy will feel like Saks on Fifth Avenue before too long. Going in here is a treat. Don some gloves, grab a trolley and saunter those aisles as slowly as you please. Bypass the toilet paper aisle, we both know it will be futile.

2. Your local grocery store will feel like Harrods Food Hall. Spotting a jar of pasta sauce and a packet of penne will feel like you’ve found a truffle under an oak tree. Savor the moment.

3. Don’t buy tins of tuna. Not even the dog will eat it.

4. Buy pencils. Lots of them. Preferably pre-sharpened. They don’t make sharpeners like they used to.

5. Open a Zoom account. Stat.

6. Get an Ipad stand so you don’t have to use family heirlooms to keep the Ipads in place during class.

7. Get your hair colored immediately.

8. Buy root spray. If you were too late for #7.

9. Get your nails done.

10. Buy nail clippers and a nail file. Learn how to use them.

11. Get your eyebrows waxed. And other parts if you need to.

12. Buy razors. See above.

13. Realize that by Day 7 things are going to start to fall apart.

14. Set up Zoom cocktail hours with your buddies. See above.

15. Get 30 minutes of fresh air a day. From a distance.

16. Get your neighbors email addresses and phone numbers and don’t be afraid to use them.

17. Clear out your freezer of last year’s “I’m sure I’ll eat that one day” leftovers and fill it with pizzas, frozen fruit and veges and bread. ALL the bread.

18. Buy ice cube trays.

19. Wash your hands every time you say to yourself “when will this end?”

20. Take comfort that the whole world is in this together and we will all triumph together. And then we will hug.

This post originally appeared on Facebook.

I am an Aussie who has lived in the Bay Area of San Francisco for 6 years with my 2 adorable boys and their pretty awesome Dad. I believe we get to choose our mood and attitude each day and I ALWAYS choose positive!

With schools across the country closing temporarily, many kids are left wondering about the status of their extracurricular activities. Drama productions, team sports and musical performances have been cancelled, disappointing many kids that have been working hard for months now. Tony Award winning Broadway star, Laura Benanti has put out a call for all student thespians to send her a video of them singing a song from their cancelled shows.

On Instagram, Benanti wrote,”Dark times for all. Trying to find some bright spots. If you were meant to perform in your High School musical and it was cancelled please post yourself singing, tag me and use the hashtag #SunshineSongs so whoever wants to can be your audience!! Sending all my love and black market toilet paper.”

Other celebrities, including Lin Manuel Miranda, chimed in asking to see the videos as well.

Jennifer Garner also put out a call as well, saying, “To the Elsas and Matildas; to the Willy Lomans and Romeos. Not to mention the flautists, the pianists, the gymnasts, the shot-putter. We want to SEE—show us what you’ve got!! 🌟 #heyjenlookatme (I just now found out one of my favorite Broadway stars @laurabenanti had the same idea. Hi Laura! ♥️🤗 You can tag her, too, at #SunshineSongs)”

While you are stuck at home, brighten your day by scrolling through and watching these talented kids.

—Jennifer Swartvagher

Featured photo: Monica Silvestre from Pexels

 

Forget about a few paper bats and a toilet paper mummy. One Pennsylvania woman turned her home’s entire front entry into a massive Cookie Monster sculpture—and it’s every bit as awesome as you’d imagine.

Lisa Boll, a major Sesame Street fan, transformed her York, PA home into a non-scary Halloween display in honor of the show’s 50th anniversary. Boll reportedly used blue spray paint to turn shrubbery into Cookie Monster’s fur and added giant styrofoam eyes. She also constructed a massive chocolate chip cookie to place near the door (a.k.a. Cookie Monster’s mouth).

https://www.instagram.com/p/B4K_zjoAkzX/

The over-the-top door decor is getting plenty of attention. Boll told CBS3 Philly, “It was surprising just how many people get a big kick out of it. It’s good. It’s fun for Halloween and the fact that it’s not a horror thing, it appeals to kids under the age of 3, especially, it’s not scary.”

Now dubbed “The Cookie Monster House,” Boll’s home decor is pure Halloween happiness!

—Erica Loop

Featured photo: WJZ via YouTube

 

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Everywhere I turn these days, someone is talking about Tidying Up with Marie Kondo. The first time this happened was in 2014 when Marie Kondo’s infamous book hit shelves and the Minimalist podcast captured the imagination of a country whose citizens love their stuff. 

In the grocery store line I’d overhear roommates and partners jokingly ask each other, “But does this extra large flat of toilet paper spark joy?” At IKEA, I’d watch as people pulled meticulously folded garments out of their backpacks to see if they fit properly in drawer organizers. Now that the Netflix Original series is out, it’s happening all over again.

I understand the wish to lighten one’s load, to spend less energy on stuff and more on experiences and life and people. The concept of clean, uncluttered spaces appeals to most of us. If our environs are calm, perhaps our hearts and minds will feel the same. The problem is, geography and environment can only moderate our insides to a point. 

In a time when the competition for our attention is constant, it makes sense to me that the glimmer of hope provided by “fail-proof” de-cluttering strategy is sweeping the nation. It appeals to our sensibilities. Removing extraneous objects, focusing on joy and gratitude and walking away with a physical space that feels less busy are all things that we can DO. 

We fill bags for donation and drop them off. We rearrange our display shelves and leave large gaps on our walls and in our closets that demonstrate what we’ve accomplished. It all feels great.

It’s much harder to do the work of tidying up our minds and hearts. Clutter that lives there, in the intra-psychic world, is much more difficult to sort. Certainly negative self-talk and painful memories do not bring us joy and we can’t, in good faith, express gratitude to our obsessive worry and tireless rumination. There’s no container large enough for our persistent hyper vigilance or our certainty that there’s an email, podcast, episode, Slack stream or text we have missed and no charitable donation center to bring these things to.

I often say that there is no longer a distinction between our “real lives” and our “digital lives.” Given that we spend a bulk of our day amassing experiences in digital domains, that this investment impacts our physiological, emotional and relational well being and that the constant activity there permeates every part of our being leads me to believe that a tidying up movement for our real-digital (mashup intentional) lives is in order.

I can just imagine what this might look like as a sketch comedy piece. A tiny energetic sparkly being enters the subject on an inhale, soaring in through the nostril and arriving at the center of the internal body to say, in a pixie, yet soothing, voice, “Let’s express gratitude for this bag of skin that carries you around. No. Really. Let’s do it. Breathe in and Out saying ‘thank you’ to your body.” 

Floating up toward the brain the voice would instruct, “Now let’s take everything from every region of this organ and push it toward the center to be sorted. With each memory or thought you come across, touch it, hold it, ask yourself if it brings you joy. If it does, find a home for it. If it doesn’t, get rid of it.”

In the sketch, that pile would be filled with old failed tests, heartbreaks, big wins, big fears and persistent niggling worries. The subject, inspired by the dulcet tones and cheerful encouragement would hold each item, bidding the weighty farewell with gratitude and organizing the remaining items with precision and care.

If only this were doable. (Trust me. I wish it were. I have immense respect for Marie Kondo.) Instead, the constant, loud, competitive clutter in our hearts and minds drives us forward (or plunges us backward) largely out of our conscious awareness. 

An email reminds us of a task we’ve forgotten so we dive in only to be interrupted, a few seconds later, by a text pointing our attention to a different task that feels equally as important. In the midst of our multitasking we catch sight of a notification about a breaking story and click on the link. While skimming the story we are notified that a package has been delivered and, while walking to retrieve it we are reminded that the other package we expected yesterday, never came. We follow the links to track that package, arrive back at our desk, open the padded envelope we’ve just received and have no idea where this whole train of action began. This expression of our cluttered internal worlds happens over and over every day and is fed by our constant connection to our devices and the digitally over stuffed offerings they provide.

In a recent poll, Common Sense Media found that 50 percent of adolescents feel addicted to their devices; 27 percent of parents feel the same. Even for those who may not identify with the feeling of dependence that addiction assumes, the average American is spending 10 plus hours a day with screens. This kind of engagement with the ever expanding access to data, ideas and experiences online is bound to create clutter—much of it unnecessary and, some of it, downright harmful.

In order to be healthy we need an ability to be both stimulated and soothed. We need to be able to be productive and, then, to let rest restore us. We need to be able to both DO and BE. 

I feel that we are seriously neglecting the soothing, resting and being parts of these balancing forces. It’s time that we challenge the notions that an over-active mind is the best mind and that always being busy is the highest valued way of being in the world It’s time that we learn to step away from devices, at least some of the time, in order to practice boredom tolerance, which is related to higher levels of creativity; focus on one thing at a time, which improves depth of performance; and the ability to delay gratification, which simply makes us more satisfied humans. It’s time to take seriously the impact of mental and emotional clutter and to devise plans for a cleaning out. 

5 Easy Steps for De-Cluttering the Mind

  1. Identify a 10-minute block of time that you can commit—daily—to spending on this process. Set an alarm on your phone to remind you.
  2. When the alarm goes, off take as little time as necessary to stop what you are doing. Imagine that you are closing a book. Put a bookmark where you are stopping, close the book and turn your attention toward simply being.
  3. Find a focal point. This need not be visual. It can be a sound, a smell, a physical sensation, a taste or an image. Whatever it is, try to have it be something neutral. Clouds, a calming essential oil blend, a handful of putty, the taste and temperature of water or the feeling and sound of a singing bowl would work well. Whatever your focal point, fix your attention on this in such a way that it forces other stimuli (from within or without) out of the frame of your consciousness.
  4. Once you are settled, enjoy the focus as fully as possible. When competing stimuli arise, notice them, then imagine reaching out and placing them in the book along with your bookmark. You’ll return to them when you’re done being. As quickly as possible, return your focus to your focal point.
  5. Repeat.

Does this spark joy for you now? I hope it does.

Doreen Dodgen-Magee
Tinybeans Voices Contributor

doreen dodgen-magee is a psychologist, author, & speaker who thinks about how technology is shaping people. Her book, Deviced! Balancing Life & Technology in a Digital Age was awarded the 2018 Gold Nautilus Award for Psychology & has been featured in the New York Times, Time Magazine, & the Washington Post.