Forget about mom-shaming. The mamas who visit NYC’s LaGuardia Airport’s Mamava lactation pod are each other’s biggest cheerleaders.

When The Wing CEO/first visibly pregnant woman on the cover of a magazine/new mommy, Audrey Gelman, recently visited the pod she snapped a pic of something totally unexpected. There were dozens of sticky notes on the pod’s interior, all offering words of wisdom and encouragement.

https://www.instagram.com/p/B5qWAGEh5WQ

The photo, which Gelman recently posted on Instagram, shows notes that read everything from, “What you are doing is Beyond Amazing” to, “Thank you to Mamava pods! And thank you mammas for all these messages. We are amazing!!”

Gelman captioned the photo with her thoughts on motherhood and this awesome action, “All of a sudden i felt flooded—the intensity of new motherhood, the stress of running a business i never thought would grow this fast —and the pressure i put on myself to do it all perfectly.” She continued, “The notes were sappy but they were the only things i needed to read in that moment. “You are enough,” “it gets better,” “feel proud of yourself for what you’ve created.” Those simple messages of encouragement and the recognition that so many have been through this before made me feel less alone.”

—Erica Loop

Featured photo: Audrey Gelman via Instagram 

 

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Play is an important part of growing up, not only during childhood but also into adulthood and later in life. However, as we grow older, the free, unstructured play that once used to fill our time is replaced by more structured sports and game-playing and then turns to more sedentary activities.

According to The Genius of Play, an initiative spearheaded by The Toy Association to raise awareness with parents, caregivers, and educators about the importance of play, giving children the opportunity to play with the whole family, including grandparents, provides a multitude of benefits for both young and old alike.

With Grandparent’s Day on September 8, I spoke to Dr. Amanda Gummer, child psychologist and founder of Fundamentally Children, who explained that when kids have contact or play with older adults, they display higher levels of language development and problem-solving skills. Playing with people of different ages allows little ones to improve social and communication skills, while bonding and creating shared memories and traditions. When grandparents tell stories about their own lives, it helps children open their horizons and understand more about the world around them.

And while children can gain an enriched learning experience from interacting with positive role models, playtime is also great for grandparents, as it gives them a chance to reminisce about their childhood. Playtime with grandchildren also promotes relaxation, reduces stress and increases activity levels in older generations, helping to increase coordination and maintain cognitive skills. Staying in good health allows grandparents to be able to experience new things with their grandchildren, which can build a foundation for a relationship that will last a long time.

Children bring innocence, joy, laughter, and youthfulness into any environment and the elderly bring wisdom, experience, and maturity. So, with Grandparent’s Day on the horizon, remember to encourage a healthy, playful relationship between your kids and their grandparents.

 

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


My son, Tom, won’t eat vegetables. It’s the taste. It’s the texture. It’s just the very idea of eating a vegetable. He can choke down some broccoli under duress, but only after voices get raised, and even then, he has to slather it in ketchup, which wouldn’t be most people’s first choice, but we don’t want to discourage him. He’s 11 and he’s always been anti-vegetable. He’s a child of strong opinions. He eats fruit, and guzzles milk, and suffers the occasional ketchup-soaked broccoli, so he’s healthy and his pediatrician says he’s in no immediate danger of problematic vitamin deficiency. But lack of deficiency isn’t really the standard we’re going for. We’re going for well-balanced. Not Epicurean, necessarily, but let’s take it in on faith that a well-balanced diet will keep him healthy and serve him well in life. And the world is a better place after you’ve tasted butter sautéed morels. It just is.

Like most parents, we end up picking our battles, and the ones he wins end with a booty of burgers and fries. This happens too often. He wants to be a professional baseball player when he grows up, and we told him that wasn’t happening if he doesn’t eat his vegetables. He doesn’t care. Maybe he won’t be a baseball player after all, he says. Maybe he’ll be a professional hot dog eater. He saw a special on ESPN about Takeru Kobayashi, the hot dog-eating world champion, who seemed to be able to make a living at it. Tom doesn’t even like hot dogs that much, but he sees an opportunity to undermine our point, so he’s all in on it.

We researched all the advice on how to get picky-eaters to be less picky. The conventional wisdom is this: start early. Experiment when they’re too young to know the difference. Tom is the second of two, and this worked well for his sister Katie, who is the adventurous eater in the family. The girl loves a good mushroom. Maybe it’s the lot of the second child, but we seem to have dropped the ball the second time around. Maybe we were spread too thin or just exhausted. Or maybe it’s a DNA thing. The question is, what do we do about it now that he’s eleven and still fake-gags at the sight of anything green on his plate? Your mileage may vary, but in our experience, there have been several stages to this little drama.

  • First was Persuasion: attempting to convince him of the nutritional benefits of eating veggies. As noted, this stage was unproductive.
  • Next came Negotiation & Compromise. Conventional wisdom says not to negotiate with your child. Conventional wisdom is right. It doesn’t work and only cedes leverage where it isn’t warranted. Also, it turns out Tom is an excellent negotiator. This will serve him well later in life, but for now, it’s problematic.
  • Moving on to the Introduction of Consequences. This stage is a bummer for everyone. Especially when negotiations have already failed and both sides have decided to dig in for the long haul. But the loss of screen time and no dessert are nothing compared to walking away from a career in Major League Baseball, so this goes nowhere.
  • Exhaustion. By 11, you should really be eating vegetables. But here we are, exhausted and on the brink of defeat. No vegetables are consumed for some time in this stage.
  • Emerging from Exhaustion, we had a breakthrough. It involved a last-chance, good-faith effort to explain why a well-balanced diet was important, followed by a genuine ask for Tom’s help in solving the problem. How can we do this together, buddy? Work with us. He thought about it. He thought about it some more. Ok, he said, if you can blend vegetables into smoothies so that I can’t taste them, I’ll give it a shot. (We’d tried this before, by sneaking in the veggies, but he developed some sort of sixth sense that alerted him to boycott them.) Now, for the first time, he was no longer objecting to vegetables purely on principle. He had met us, not quite halfway, but it was progress.

He felt invested in the solution, without being shamed or lectured or threatened with consequences, which was one important key to this particular puzzle. We’re partners now. So he’ll be getting a broader array of vitamins and nutrients in smoothie-form every day, though not the worldview expanding benefits that come from experimenting with different tastes and textures, and recipes from different cultures. But it’s a start.

The second breakthrough came in the form of a family project in which we wrote a book about picky-eaters. It echoes a lot of Katie and Tom’s conversations around the dinner table. We had published a few other books, and our little creative team had been casting about for new ideas. I figured, as a co-author of a book on the topic of picky-eaters and the upside of trying new food, surely Tom would feel an obligation to make good on its premise. And he has, a little. Baby steps. We’re getting there.

So if all else fails, try investing your picky-eater in the solution. Form a partnership. And then have your fully-invested picky eater write a book about the benefits of trying new things. That’s part’s a little trickier. Like I said, your mileage may vary. But it’s working for us. I bought some chocolate covered ants for dessert the other day to test how far we’d come. Tom wouldn’t eat them. But then, neither would Katie, who’s supposed to be the adventurous one. Apparently, that was just too much. I can’t say I blame them, though. They were kind of gross.

 

JTK Belle is Jeff, Tommy and Katie Belle. They are the founders of Picklefish Press, a publisher of children's books.  Their latest release is "I Don't Like to Eat Ants". They live in Seattle, WA.

Life in Afghanistan was easier than life in Washington, DC.

Yes, I realize how terrible that sounds.

The day-to-day grind of two big careers, two small children, major urban commutes, maintaining a home, and trying to have some semblance of a family and personal life is hard.

It is too hard.

In Afghanistan, we didn’t have commutes.  We didn’t have chores.  Food was prepared and provided to us.  We had work, and we had whatever everyone was doing after work as our social life.

Sure, we missed home.  We missed family.  We could have happily done without Duck and Cover alarms that sent us sprinting to the nearest bunker.  We’re thrilled to be away from the omnipresent dust and putrid smell.

We lost colleagues and friends and some of the guards that greeted us each day.

Now, to be fair, we had each other, and we did not yet have our children, so, this is an imbalanced comparison.  But there are certainly days when my husband, Caleb, and I look at each other and reminisce about our simpler times.

In the last couple of weeks, my office rolled out yet another initiative aimed at convincing the work force that the leadership cares about them as whole and healthy people.  Except, if you cracked the hood on that car…

Oooooooph

There was literally nothing there.  No engine.  Nothing.

I’ve been listening to Rachel Hollis’s books and watched her Netflix special.  Caleb is usually the one super-into motivational speakers and their books.  Hollis is often referred to as the “Tony Robbins for women.”  Caleb loves Tony Robbins.

Hollis has done something pretty remarkable in that she tapped into an ocean of female need and desire for someone to inspire them to become better versions of themselves; to become something more.  A key theme for her is that women should aspire to whatever they want to aspire to and apologize to no one about wanting to be something more.  Actually, she wants us to have the audacity to get explicit and write down what we want and who we want to become and shout it out to the world.

Ambitious kids who want to partner up with other ambitious kids and have kids together need a a more targeted example.  Two big careers and young children under one roof needs to become not just notionally possible but rather an enviable option.  It needs to be a passionate and fulfilling existence, not a soul-sucking, guilt-ridden slog.

I can’t find a single person to look to for inspiration on this.

I posted the following on a Facebook group for over 17,000 local moms:

“Hi ladies!  Does anyone have a favorite blogger or YouTuber they feel really speaks to the career mom?  I’m looking for a Rachel Hollis of the executive aspirant, MMLaFleur crowd.”

One response:

“At my work place, the working moms either all work part-time or have a stay-at-home dad.  Yeah, the only two females in management have husbands who stay at home.  And I know they don’t have time for mentoring younger women.  I’m midlevel in my career, and with a full-time job and two small kids, I wouldn’t be able to mentor anyone either.”

And this:

“The woman you are looking for is too busy for blogging.”

And another:

“When I got pregnant with my first child, I was in a leadership development program.  I was lucky to be able to schedule some time with a fairly senior woman at my company.  I expected wisdom and magic, but she had a stay-at-home husband and a nanny.  I have since tempered my expectations for my career—most VPs at my company are not much older than me, but again, they all either have no kids or a stay-at-home spouse.”

The final comment on the thread?

“F”

Indeed.  I mean, I know it means “follow,” but that it could be read that other way only made it all the more apropos.

 

This post originally appeared on Isaac & Isabel.

With a high-profile job in national security, I'm a champion for career families.  My husband and I met in Afghanistan, got married days after making it home, and have been building our family in Virginia ever since.  Five years and two children later, we know a lot about streamlining daily life! 

What should you do when you’re feeling blue? Turn that frown upside down. New research suggests smiling can make you feel happy.

Usually we smile because we’re happy, but the opposite can be true as well according to new research from the University of Tennessee at Knoxville. Encouraging your moody tot to say cheese might actually do more than result in a cute picture, it could put them in a better mood.

photo: Jose Ibarra via Unsplash

A team of psychologists examined data from 138 studies across 50 years which included over 11,000 participants and found that facial expressions have a small impact on our emotions. “Conventional wisdom tells us that we can feel a little happier if we simply smile. Or that we can get ourselves in a more serious mood if we scowl,” said Nicholas Coles, UT PhD student in social psychology and lead researcher on the paper. “But psychologists have actually disagreed about this idea for over 100 years.”

According to the results of their analysis different facial expressions can have a small impact on the way people feel. For example, scowling can make you feel angrier and smiling can make you feel happier.

“We don’t think that people can smile their way to happiness,” Coles said. “But these findings are exciting because they provide a clue about how the mind and the body interact to shape our conscious experience of emotion. We still have a lot to learn about these facial feedback effects, but this meta-analysis put us a little closer to understanding how emotions work.”

—Shahrzad Warkentin

 

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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. 

In a fresh interview with PEOPLE, new dad Andy Cohen dished all about his beautiful baby boy and how his life has already changed for the better. The producer, Watch What Happens Live host and author welcomed his first child, Benjamin Allen Cohen, at the age of 50 on Feb. 4 via surrogate—and he’s nothing but glad he waited.

Cohen made sure he didn’t miss a thing, staking out a prime spot in the delivery room and even cutting the umbilical cord himself. After a quick clean up, he went skin-to-skin with his son and reveled in his new role as a papa.

Facing fatherhood at 50 doesn’t scare Cohen one bit. He tells PEOPLE that he has “a sense of calm that I didn’t have 10 [or] 20 years ago.” Perhaps fellow older dad George Clooney has some parenting wisdom he could throw his way?

Back in his home state of New York with baby in tow, Cohen is ready to get into the parenting game. With his network of support huddled around him, the Bravo TV host will surely wrangle midnight feedings and diaper changes like the pro he is.

––Karly Wood

 

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Grandparents have plenty of wisdom and life experience to impart, but when it comes to being tech-savvy they aren’t always the best. But that won’t always stop them from trying. Despite a clear language barrier between one grandma and her new Google Home, she keeps trying to give it commands and the results are hilarious.

As PEOPLE reports, 85-year-old grandmother, Maria Actis was gifted a Google Home Mini in her family’s Secret Santa exchange, but she didn’t exactly hit it off with the device. “My grandmother was very excited to show everyone her new gift, but she obviously needed a little help using it,” Ben Actis, Maria’s grandson, told PEOPLE. “The whole day was like that with her!”

It’s impossible not to laugh when Maria repeatedly calls the device “Goo Goo” instead of Google, but the cutest moment of all is clearly when she finally gets the device to work and she jumps up from her seat in awe and disbelief. It’s not hard to see why the adorable video has already racked up over one million views on YouTube.

What funny reactions has your family had to smart devices? Share your stories in the comments below.

Editor’s Note: this post originally was published in pre-COVID times (remember those days?), but we still think the ideas are valuable. 

I just found out I am going to be a grandma come spring! My how they do grow up quickly! I have always valued family time. Even as family time with all six of my own kids has varied over the years, they will all tell you I have always prioritized love of family and our time together. With one married and expecting, two high-schoolers away at boarding school, one in middle school and two still in elementary school, you can imagine life is a little busy at my house! Here are some simple ways we maximize family time amidst the chaos of work and life:

Get up together – We only have two bathrooms, so we don’t get up at the same second, but you get the idea. My husband and I get up around 6am and wake up the kids by 7am so they can see Daddy before he leaves for work around 7:15am. I hear you saying, really? 15 minutes? Just a short time is enough to give the kids the reassurance of seeing their father before we all go our different ways for the day. There is nothing worse than one of the kids bawling their eyes out because they didn’t get to kiss Daddy goodbye or remind him to stop at the corner store before coming home. I think it helps my husband to see that they are up and moving too.

Turn off devices after school, when the weather is nice or after short time limits – I am constantly telling them to turn in the devices or turn them off, but especially before responsibilities are complete. Before and after school, devices remain off until chores are done, like making beds, packing snacks, eating and dressing in the morning and unpacking bags, doing homework and feeding pets after school. My husband and I often remind ourselves how, when we were kids, our parents were in charge of the television and we hardly ever got to watch what we wanted. We certainly never had electronic or digital devices. We tell the kids to come outside (where we usually are) and involve them in what we are doing, even when they hate it!

Prepare dinner together – On a good day, I might have supper prepared and in the oven before the kids get off the bus. This is not most days. Most days, I am whipping up something when I get home from picking up or dropping off somebody, so an extra hand or eight is helpful. Kids can’t do really hard or dangerous stuff, but they are great at grabbing bowls and utensils, throwing stuff away, mixing or spreading stuff, and older kids can cut if you show them. Crazy idea here, but preparing food sometimes involves small amounts of reading and math measurements. Not only is this a great way to bond with your kids, but they practice academic skills and learn a few real-life ones too! Bonus!

Eat meals together – Yeah, you’ve heard this before. Me too. I admit this is hard if one parent works second shift, but there is one meal you could probably squeeze in, depending on your family’s crazy schedule. Maybe it is breakfast most days, but make an effort to sit at your table, television and radio off, and just eat. You will discover conversation happens and you will learn about each other’s day in new and different ways. You might even share your own experiences or impart some wisdom on your kids.

Tuck the kids into bed – Even teenagers want to be tucked into bed. Yes, they will probably stay awake longer than you if you let them, but spending just a few more minutes together at the end of a day is a great way to maximize family time. My kids love their bedtime routine and request certain songs. We used to do a round-robin highlights and lowlights of our day, which sometimes took forever. Whatever you do, tuck in your kids and then reward yourself with some adult time with your spouse. You have earned it!

My family really does do these five things and we really do spend lots of time together. Hey, nobody ever promised family time was going to be a dream! Just like the rest of life, family time can’t always be a party (life lesson). It does take hard work to run a household and kids need to realize that and be engaged in it too. There is never enough time in the day to do it all, anyway. That’s why I am glad there is tomorrow, to finish all the tasks I didn’t today.

Featured Photo Courtesy: shutterstock

Go Au Pair representative, cultural childcare advocate, Mom to six great kids, I earned my BS at RI College and MEd at Providence College. My hats: educator, tutor and writer of local blog for Go Au Pair families and Au Pairs. Baking, gardening, reading and relaxing on the porch are hobbies.