Category Archives: parenting

NSABD

It’s National Share A Blog Day (NSABD)!  Okay, I made that up, but I’ve been thinking a lot about how to broaden my reach.  In other words, I want more readers, more Facebook “Likes,” more Twitter followers, a book deal, a talk show, and a boat!  (One with a bathroom on board, thank you very much.)

I like to dream big, but I’m also humble and have a hard time taking a compliment (go ahead and try) and asking for things, so I’d be over the moon happy with just a few new blog subscribers.  I figured since I’ve been entertaining you for almost two years with tales from the crypt Mama-hood (my blog-iversary, blog birthday or whatever you want to call it is just a few days away!), it’s about time you did something for me (said The Runaway Mama very, very nicely).

This is where NSABD comes in.  All I want you to do is share my blog with two people (or 10…that would be cool) (or 100…wow!) in your life.  And because I’m such a good Mama, I’ve made it easy.  Below you’ll see a recap of some of my most recent posts, as well as a few “oldie but goodie” acronym-themed posts – AOC and PVSD – in honor of this one.  And at the very bottom of this page is a new “sharing” button so you can easily share this very post (or any post at all) with every single person on the planet.  Just like that.  See, I did all the hard work for you.  All you have to do is share it.  Because sharing is nice.  And not sharing is crappy.  Here goes…

  • Wonky Mama (n.):  A Mama who has too much time on her hands and takes a dozen pictures of her son mailing his first letter at the post office.  Read “Postal” here.
  • Sometimes good parenting feels bad.  It’s that simple (except it’s not simple at all).  Read about it here.
  • Considering a postnuptial agreement?  Read “Testimony” here.
  • To have or not to have another baby named after a Star Wars character?  Read “Luke Skywalker” here.
  • Planning a trip to Legoland?  For an expert (I use that term very loosely) review, read “Legoland: The Good, The Great, and The Well…” here.
  • Do you like math?  Check out some Runaway Mama Word Problems here and here.
  • Acute Onset Chaos (AOC).  A must read, especially during the summer when play dates are plentiful.  Read about it here.
  • Post Vacation Stress Disorder (PVSD).  Required reading before your next kid-free vacation!  Read “PVSD” here.

Okay, that should do it.  Thanks for helping a Mama out on (fake) National Share A Blog Day.  From one Mama to another, “Abracadabra, please, and thank you” (that’s what Riley would say).  In other words, thanks for reading and sharing!

p.s. Have you signed up to receive email alerts when I publish a new post?  Have you “Liked” my Runaway Mama Facebook page yet?  Are you following me on Twitter?  You can do all of these things by clicking on the links to the right.  Over here ——–>

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Filed under Acute Onset Chaos (AOC), Legoland, math, motherhood, parenting, vacation

Postal

When I began working at Casa Valentina, I knew the foster girls we served struggled with employment, school, money, and health.  No surprise there.  They’d spent their entire childhoods being shuttled from one dysfunctional home and school to another.  They had no stability or consistency and few positive role models in their lives.  Of course they had a hard time applying for jobs, cooking healthy meals (or cooking at all), and understanding concepts like “overdraft” and “credit.”

The thing that blindsided me were the small things they had no idea how to do, like mailing a letter.  I remember the staff meeting where our program director described to us (with our jaws dropped) an eighteen- or nineteen-year-old girl who had no idea where to write the outgoing or return address on an envelope.  No one had ever taught her how to do it.  No one was ever around or cared enough to show her the simple and important act of mailing a letter.

It’s been several years since I worked at Casa Valentina, but I think about the girls often as I go about the business of raising my boys.  I am, quite literally, the opposite of the mother figures most of the girls at Casa Valentina knew.  My children are the center of my world.  I cater to their every whim.  I often joke (but it’s true) that I serve at the pleasure of my adorable and demanding children.  One might even describe my parenting behavior as helicopter-ish.  I live for my kids.  I do everything for my kids – so much so that if I’m not careful, I’ll end up with two grown boys who lack simple – and important – life skills.  Like knowing how to mail a letter.

A few days ago, Dylan made a picture for his cousins who live in San Francisco.  When he was done, I asked him if he wanted to mail it to them.  Of course, he did.  I could have easily sealed, addressed, stamped, and mailed the letter the next day while he was at camp, but I thought about Casa Valentina and did the opposite. I let Dylan fold the picture and slide it inside an envelope.  I showed him where to write his and his cousins’ address (I helped with the writing), and then he sealed the envelope and he put the stamp in the top right corner.  Yesterday after camp, we went to the post office together to mail the letter.

Standing proudly outside the entrance to the post office:

Mailing his first letter!

After he dropped the envelope in the slot, I said, “Congratulations Dylan!  You mailed your first letter!” which prompted a few people standing nearby to snicker.  (I like to think they thought it was a cute rite-of-passage rather than an exercise in silliness by an overly enthusiastic Mama.)  The whole thing was a bit corny, but you should’ve seen the smile on Dylan’s face (and mine) as he mailed his very first letter.

The point I’m trying to make here, besides providing some damning evidence that I’m a Wonky Mama, is that even though we want to do everything for our kids, we can’t.  It’s often easier and less messy, like putting straws in their juice boxes so the juice doesn’t squirt everywhere or putting toothpaste on their toothbrushes so the sink doesn’t end covered in the sticky stuff, but if we always do these things for them, they’ll never learn how to do it for themselves.

The next time you write a thank you note, mail a letter, fill out a bank deposit slip, or write a check, involve your kids in the process.  Someday they’ll thank you.  Oh, and don’t forget to teach them to say please and thank you or else they won’t know how to do that either.  And there’s nothing more annoying that a grown-up with no manners.  There’s also nothing more heartbreaking than a kid on the cusp of independence who doesn’t know how to mail a letter.

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Filed under Helicopter Mama, motherhood, parenting, Uncategorized