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That is such an awesome, but weird, commercialIt would be exciting.
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mom and baby were out with her mom so we missed baby, but took pasta shells, brownies, and the granola energy bite things. Wasn't sure about those but the dad was like "she's been eating these type of things like crazy, she'll love these!"
yay, glad I decided to make them! Might go back on Friday to take more food and see baby. Dad goes back to work Monday. He said he's pretty exhausted right now.
I don't think it's a parents job to make sure they live in a bubble until they're 18, I think it's their job to prepare their children for life. Saying "I refuse to let you do something you'd really enjoy and would gain lots of positive life experiences from because there's a chance you might get hurt" is not the way to properly do so.
But as KC said, it IS the parents job to make sure they don't rush back from an injury, for example, or quit because something didn't go the way they wanted it to, as a growing and developing tool that child can use for the rest of their life.
Strictly my opinion, of course.
Did I somewhere miss the beginning part of this story?
OK, not to drag this topic up again, but a pretty good illustration of how parenting sometimes is about stopping them from doing things they want to do just for their protection: Little00 has been tired from school this week, but this morning the neighbor kids wanted to play with our kids. Wanting to keep an eye on how little00 was doing, we said they could play, but had to stay at our house. Sure enough, around lunch time, he's fried, starts whining about something, throws a tantrum. They go home, we have lunch, we rest. Afternoon, little00's feeling better, but we know his reservoirs are still low. Neighbor kid comes over and wants to play again. While we love that little00 is gaining independance and making new friends, we know he'll play till he's fried again, and we have a church thing tonight. So we said no. He hated it, threw a fit, but while it is an unpopular decision, it's the right thing for him knowing the consequences later.
Did I somewhere miss the beginning part of this story?
I mentioned last night that I was making stuff to take to new mom friend today. Well, mostly I was taste testing it.
There WERE a lot of distractions last night...
And as I indicated elsewhere - making most of the decisions for a toddler/pre-schooler is absolutely the right thing for a parent to do, IMO. We were talking more about teenagers and sports. Get back to me when your guys are 10 years older.![]()
And as I indicated elsewhere, it does change when they get older. I was only addressing the comment "[I don't think it's a parents job to make sure they live in a bubble until they're 18, I think it's their job to prepare their children for life.] Saying "I refuse to let you do something you'd really enjoy and would gain lots of positive life experiences from because there's a chance you might get hurt" is not the way to properly do so." with a specific example of doing just that. It is a core part of parenting, although the scope and necessity of that action decreases as they get older.
Think she is bribing her neighbors to be her friends.
I've been watching high school football games on ESPN and I have notice there's like no one in the stands. If my school was playing on ESPN the stadium would be full.
How sad is my life that I'm looking forward to my grilled cheese and soup-from-a-can dinner?
Maybe. We had like 500 fans for an away game and it was raining.Ames High?