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Jun
17

Managing Morning Madness – Trouble Spots

Posted in Family, parenting, Things to do, Uncategorized

Welcome back to the final installment of Managing Morning Madness!  Today’s tips are somewhat subjective, so I’ll give a couple examples but you’ll want to target your own trouble spot and come up with a solution that works!

Target Your Trouble Spot

Chances are, your mornings are not chaotic all over the board, but the problem can be traced down to one or two key trouble spots. Think about what it is that you never seem to get to do or the area that always pushes you behind schedule and work on it.  Don’t try to apply all of my tips at once; work on one at a time.  You’ll be more successful this way and less likely to be overwhelmed with a bunch of changes all at once.  I also suggest starting with something that can be easily fixed.  By starting “small” you’ll have success sooner, which will motivate you to tackle the next problem.

I’ve mentioned in a previous blog that shoes were a trouble spot for us and I explained how I handled it.  Another example comes from a friend of mine.  Her nemesis was her daughter’s hair.  She couldn’t seem to make it out of the house with her daughter’s hair fixed.  Her daughter has one of those heads of hair that needs to be brushed or fixed, she’s got so much of it!

My friend finally learned that unless she fixed her daughter’s hair before they came downstairs for breakfast, it didn’t get done. So she developed the habit of fixing her daughter’s hair first thing in the morning. By getting it in braids, a pony tail, or a barrette, she had it done and out of the way. Then, later in the morning, when her daughter got herself dressed, my friend didn’t have to remember to go do her daughter’s hair and when they left the house, she didn’t take a “wild child” with her.

There’s another simple solution to this same problem: keep a brush in the car.  Then you can always brush it when you get where you’re going.

So you see from these two examples (the shoes and the hair), there are multiple ways to address your trouble spot.  Think “outside the box” about solutions to your trouble spot and an idea will come to you. Try something for a few weeks and see if it makes a difference. Either you’ll have your problem solved or you’ll know that you need to try a new approach.

When the Trouble Isn’t a Task

As I talked to a few other parents, I discovered two common trouble spots that weren’t “tasks” to be completed, but much bigger issues:

  • Motivating a Child to Get Ready (also known as the dawdling child)
  • Abnormal Days/Change of Daily Routine (that one or two days a week when your schedule isn’t normal and you’re required to be out of the house earlier than normal)

Motivating a dawdling child is a HUGE topic and one I won’t cover here in Morning Madness. I’ll post a blog with some ideas for dawdling children in a few weeks, so check back.  But as for the problem of needing to be out of the house earlier than normal, if you slowly start to apply the steps I’ve written about in these four blogs on “Managing Morning Madness,” hopefully those “abnormal days” won’t set you back.  If you plan ahead, pack the night before, have a nutritional breakfast ready for in the car and  get your kids trained to be involved in the morning routines, you should haven’t any trouble being out the door earlier than normal…with the exception of possibly having to set the alarm a little earlier and get out of bed sooner.  But you’re on your own for that discipline!

-posted by Donna Venning, who  felt that her stress to get out the door was starting to come out in erratic driving, so she developed her morning habits so that she can leave her house in a calm, peaceful, pleasant manner, making her a safer, nicer driver!

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Jan
11

Playing with Tempo

Posted in Child Development, Imagine That, Things to do, Uncategorized

We’ve been playing with tempo recently in Imagine That.  Preschool age children love learning tempo, because no matter how long we spend on slow, they know we will eventually get to fast – and that means running!

Tempo allows us to introduce some of the beautiful Italian terminology that all musicians use.  Largo means slow. Adagio means moderately slow, but largo is the very slowest tempo marking there is. (I do admit, though, that the word adagio is a more beautiful word than largo…) 

When a child moves their body slowly, they are mastering gross motor muscle control.  I love to watch them move in slow motion because they don’t really know how to move slowly. Some of them do a stop motion technique – they move and freeze, then move and freeze over and over again. Some of them inch along; their bodies full of tension and seemingly ready to explode with full-blown motion at any instant. 

kids-moving-lentSome of them just stop and watch me (We do lots of slow motion activities in acting classes, so I am really good at it!) I know they are watching me so that they can figure out how to do it – and soon they begin to try to stretch out their movements, and extend their limbs to the farthest point away from their bodies. Their facial expressions slow down and delight fills their eyes as they begin to realize that they are suddenly in control of this marvelous thing they call their body. 

Because, let’s face it, when you’re a preschooler, you very often feel as if your body is in charge of you. The need to move is so overwhelming that even when your internal child knows you need to sit, like for circle time, your body is demanding that you move, and mostly you feel powerless to stop it.

Learning to move slowly assists in giving your preschooler the much needed confidence they need to know that they are, indeed, in charge of their body

A Simple Way to Practice at Home
Put on some slow classical music and have a slow motion dance. You may need to invent a story (boys are more likely to require a reason to move slowly) to explain WHY you want them to move in slow motion. Maybe their super hero persona has been zapped by a slow motion ray by their arch nemesis, or their fire fighter persona is trying to walk through a vat of maple syrup to save a kitten in a burning tree… any little scenario will do. A prop will make this game more fun and loosens up their inhibitions- and yours too! Scarves and streamers are really good options. For you super hero – a cape is always best.  

Don’t have slow classical music? Go to iTunes and search for LARGO. Most classical composers named their music in descriptive terms, so the tempo setting is often listed in the title. I also searched for LENTO (just a little faster than Largo) and ADAGIO. One word of caution: I would steer away from anything with lyrics because the story in the song may inhibit your child’s motions, and creativity. Instrumental music allows them to create their own story.

-posted by Miss Allison, who sends you off you to search for LARGO. Let today be a cyber shop and dance till you drop day!

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Nov
9

Reuse, Reduce, Recycle while looking good this holiday season!

Posted in Things We Love, Uncategorized

cruzinkidzlogoIn these economic and global times, we can find ways to maximize budgets while still enjoying quality and in some cases quantity of goods through re-using. I remember 3 years ago when Analiisa handed me a bag full of Natalie’s clothes for Hallie. I seriously thought I had won the lottery! There were terrific ensembles- I swore Natalie maybe wore these once or twice. Since that day, I have been addicted to consignment boutiques both as a customer and a consigner. As we all know, Eastside and Seattle mamas have style!

Last semester in one of my classrooms, a mother mentioned checking out Woodinville’s Cruzin Kidz boutique and consignment for my new baby. She deemed it ‘the hottest one-stop shop here on the Eastside’. She wasn’t kidding! I personally have purchased Petunia Pickle Bottom diaper bags, bedroom décor, DVD’s, new See Kai Run shoes, excellent books, new hair accessories and double jogging strollers from Cruzin Kidz within the past six months. I figure, why not enjoy saving money while wearing our favorite brands and styles!

Therefore, as a special Thank You to our Studio3Music friends & families, we invite you to the first exclusive after-hours Sip & Shop Holiday event at Cruzin Kidz this Friday, Nov 13, from 7pm-9pm.

Grab your girlfriends and join us for an exclusive, adult-only Studio3Music & Cruzin Kidz after hours Sip & Shop event. As a Thank You to our Studio3Music friends & families, we have partnered with Woodinville’s premier consignment boutique, Cruzin Kidz to offer you a one night only pre-holiday shopping spree with unbeatable pricing, brand name clothing and accessories, all sizes, products, equipment and more. Raffle gifts, door prizes and adult beverages provided.

Visit them online at cruzinkidz.com. Cruzin Kidz is conveniently located in downtown Woodinville off Woodinville Snohomish Road behind our Kindermusik studio at Studio I Dance. Cruzin Kidz 13400 NE 175th St Woodinville, WA 98072.

-posted by Miss Kim, who looks forward to seeing you there and enjoying a wonderful evening with friends and family!

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Oct
14

My fab five baby picks (after 4 kids!)

Posted in Uncategorized

I was pondering the other day what kid stuff I would choose if I had to pick 5 favorite things.  After four babies in six years, there are a few things that I really love.  Some I discovered later into the game and some have been around from the start.

karissa-stroller1.  Phil and Ted Stroller (with double ‘jump seat’ attachment) – This is my newest discovery but it still makes the list because it is so wonderful that I’ve sold every other stroller that was taking up space in our garage since this one is so top notch.  It has options for every possible baby/kid scenario.  It is incredibly lightweight, it folds up so small that it takes up a fraction of the space in back of my van compared to my other strollers.

2.  Ring Sling style baby carrier (like the one I bought from this darling Etsy shop) – I’ve been through about 12 different baby carriers.  Most have been sold on Craigslist.  The only remaining ones around here are an Ergo, a Baby Bjorn and my ring sling.  The ring sling is so easy to nestle a newborn in and so quick and easy to slip a growing baby into for a hip carry.  Mine is a deep cranberry Tencel material and it still feeling positively yummy.  It packs up super small (which has become one top priority criteria these days!).

3.  Food.  Dinners I mean.  Okay, so it’s not a baby or kid product.  But there is something completely magical about getting to dinner time and having someone bring you food when you have a new baby.  Or in the months/years that follow when the days are still quite chaotic and exhausting, opening your freezer to find….real food.  Not a frozen pizza or corn dogs.  Food that nourishes and leaves you feeling full and good.  Food that you made.  Food that your friend who has five kids made you and brought to your freezer.  Food that Dream Dinners made or maybe the deli at Costco made?  Yes, that kind of food.  Absolutely priceless. 

4.  Swaddling blankets.  For new babes who startle themselves awake.  The Miracle Blanket saved our life more than once when we were going crazy with fussy babies.  It is weird looking and expensive but worth it’s weight in gold. 

karissa-diaper-bag5.  A diaper bag that is organized,  functional and easy to clean.  I had to delete the word ‘cute’ because honestly, it wasn’t on my list.   For our first three kids, this was the Eddie Bauer diaper bag backpack.  It worked so hard for me it didn’t matter that it wasn’t pretty or trendy.    It was big enough to hold snacks and baby supplies and serve as my ‘purse’ even once we had three kids.  It was small enough to fit under the stroller.  It was black and waterproof.  Need I say more?  I love that backpack. But for baby four I did splurge and get a cute pink camo Wendy Bellisimo diaper bag that I have had such fun using the past year!

The things I didn’t need that I bought?  The list is long but on the top of it would be the giant carseat stroller combo thing.  I would have just needed a good carseat and then maybe the cheap little carseat carrier stroller if at all.  Also things like bottle warmers and powder scented bags for dirty diapers.

karissa-burts-beesAnd all the baby toiletries I thought I needed!  I had lotions, creams, washes and products up the wazoo.  And now, we just use Burt’s Bees Baby Wash for all 4 kids and some apricot oil if their skin is dry.  Same for baby medicines. Holy cow! We used to have a baby medicine for EVERYTHING.  And we shelled out doses of Tylenol like it was candy.  Last year I threw it all in the trash (since it was expired anyway!).  And now we have homeopathic tablets we use as needed and give a dose of Tylenol every once in a blue moon.

My how things change!  I am continually amazed at how simple things can be, how much we can do without (whether it is voluntary or involuntary) and how my perspective on parenting is ever evolving.  Just when I think something is worked out…it isn’t.  There is no “I have arrived”,  there is simply “We’re at least on the road” and doing our best every day (which on days like today means getting really, really dirty and laughing till we scream…and eating tamales from the freezer that I bought from a darling little Mexican girl at a garage sale).

-posted by Karissa, mommy to Rylee, Caleb, Kyler and Audrey, and who blogs on a regular basis inbetween the chaos!

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Sep
28

Get up and move!

Posted in Uncategorized

Music and movement are magical ingredients to learning for both parent and child. A baby’s first communication is through movement. A toddler will respond immediately to lively music with what seems to be humorous gyrations but to him are quite serious attempts to coordinate movement with rhythmic patterns. The young child seems to be moving constantly – leaping off couches, rolling down hills, and spinning around and around until she falls down in a giggling flop on the floor.

children-dancingHere’s why children want – and NEED – to move. Our brains fully develop through movement activities such as crawling, rolling, turning, walking, skipping, reaching, swinging and much more. The brain has a plan for development that involves specific and intensive motor activities to make full use of our complicated nervous system. The nervous system of each human being must go through a series of developmental stages before the brain can operate at its full potential. All children “program” their motor and perceptual equipment, nerves and brain cells by using their whole body and all their senses.
 
Movement is fundamental for the development of the central nervous system but movement and rhythm are also essential for the development of the soul. When a parent moves with her child, a special bonding takes place that is extremely important for social and emotional growth. When a parent sings to his child, not only are language skills being developed, but also a sense of love, comfort and harmony. The special touching, laughing and rhythmic moving that takes place in a music and movement class and together at home lays a very strong and much needed foundation for a happy, healthy and joyful life!
 
So… put on your music, especially your Kindermusik, and just get moving!

-Adapted from an article written by Anne Green Gilbert, Director of the Creative Dance Center and Kaleidoscope Dance Company in Seattle, Washington, and a consultant for Kindermusik International.

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