Category: Family, Parenting

  • How One Tiger Mom Got Her Stripes

    How One Tiger Mom Got Her Stripes

    This is my Tiger Mom.

     

    The hardest part of raising a child is teaching them to ride bicycles.

    A shaky child on a bicycle for the first time needs
    both support and freedom.

    The realization that this is what the child will always need can hit hard.

    -Sloan Wilson

    Sometime around the new year, the Wall Street Journal dropped an atomic bomb on the online parenting world and called it “Why Chinese Mothers Are Superior.”

    It was the first time that I’d read an account of parenting that resembled my own upbringing without it being followed by the words, “And that’s why I’m so messed up.” Even better, it did so with humor, and without shame.

    For a fleeting moment, I felt a sense of solidarity, and validation. I thought Chua’s approach made a lot of sense. I wondered if I was being too soft on my own kids— and believe me when I say my kids would never in a million years think to describe me as “soft.”

    And then I started reading the comments.

    Whoops, turns out my childhood was criminally abusive! By loving and accepting my mom in spite of her being so hard on me, it appears I may suffer Stockholm syndrome.

    Come on. I think we can all agree the truth lies somewhere in the middle.

    I bring up Tiger Mom because the whole debate has made me reflect, quite a lot, on the hows and whys of the way I was raised. And how my own parenting is both a reflection of that, and a counter-reaction to it, especially now as my kids all start hitting the teen and tween years. (I will have at least one teenager in the house for the next 13 years. ENVY ME.) And how quick we are to judge those whose parenting styles differ from our own, when just about every parenting philosophy has its solid points.

    It depends on the kid. It depends on the parent. Why is that so hard to accept?

    She wasn’t one for dispensing advice, but these are vital lessons I learned from my Tiger Mom:

    “You don’t need help; you can do it yourself.” I learned how to do my own laundry, how to clean the house, how to cook, how to clip & redeem coupons, how to make a grocery list and pack a grocery cart at a very seriously young age. And then my mother MADE ME DO THEM. All the time. She NEVER picked up my slack. Naturally at the time I assumed this was because these weren’t my real parents and they had taken me in only to do their chores; now I am every bit as strict with my own kids so that they will enter adulthood prepared, and make someone a good spouse one day.

    “This is for your own good. It hurts me more than it hurts you.” Something my mom would say when I was being punished. I always assumed she was being flip and super mean, but as I take privileges away now I GET IT. It’s hard to be mean mom, to know that I’m the source of your current misery. It would be so easy to give in and drive you to the dance, or let you go to that party. (And sometimes I do, if I think you’ve learned your lesson, a flexibility my own mother never had.) But actions have consequences, someone has to be the adult and follow through, and unfortunately it looks like that lot falls to me.

    “It’s OK if you hate me. That means I’m doing my job.” I never imagined I’d say these words as often as I do. And mean them.

    “You are not your brother.” Now, I haven’t actually read Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mom yet (it’s on my Kindle, I just haven’t had time) but it’s my understanding that it actually chronicles how Chua’s Tiger Mom approach worked for ONE child, and NOT AT ALL for the other. I always hated the way my parents had different rules with my brother than they did for me, and it’s only since I’ve had to deal with multiple children that I understand. My brother and I are very different people. I was an exceedingly shy & timid child; I needed to be pushed hard or else I’d be perfectly content staying in my room alone, forever. My brother needed a different sort of discipline and encouragement, and he got it in spite of my cries of “UNFAIR!!” For a parent to figure out their children’s varying needs and adjust to that while navigating their sibling’s sense of justice and keeping things “even steven”… it’s a tricky business that thankfully I have some experience with, even if I only take away what didn’t work.

    “I am not _____’s mom.” We don’t parent in a vacuum. Another tricky business, sticking to our guns while not being judgmental of other parents (and not caring how we ourselves are being judged). My mom & Amy Chua had this down pat!

    “One day you will have kids of your own and you’ll understand. You’ll appreciate me then.” It’s true. I get it now, Mom. One day my kids will get it too. I hope that I’m still around when that realization breaks— my mom died before I could tell her about my newfound appreciation.

    The fact is, we all have a little Tiger Mom in us.

    Don’t think so? Let’s revisit the quote I opened with…

    “The hardest part of raising a child is teaching them to ride bicycles.
    A shaky child on a bicycle for the first time needs both support and freedom.
    The realization that this is what the child will always need can hit hard.”

    The hardest part of teaching a kid to ride bicycles, I would venture to say, is letting them fall off. Because you have to learn how to fall.

    And giving them their hugs and kisses… and then stepping back and saying, “Get back on that bike.” And not taking no for an answer.

    That is the essence of the Tiger Mom. Hardening my heart against you, for your own good.

    It’s not easy, and it’s not so terrible, either.

    Sometimes turning into my mother is not the worst thing in the world.

     

    What parenting advice or lesson did your mother give you,
    that you take to heart now as a mom?

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    Mother’s Day is approaching, and I hope that everyone will take the time to tell their own mothers how much they appreciate everything they’ve done for them— not just the easy lovey-dovey stuff, but the tough love that was as hard for them to give as it was to receive.

    I hope we can all reach out to other moms and tell them what fine children they are raising, or how we respect a parenting decision they’ve made, even if it wouldn’t work for our family. We all second-guess ourselves all the time. We’ve all wondered if we’re screwing our kids up. Give someone a little third-person reassurance that they’re just fine. Or let a new mom or mom-to-be know that she will rock this mom gig.

    Not in a half-ass, last minute kind of way, either. Tiger Mom wouldn’t approve of that. That’s why I’m nagging you a month ahead of time.

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    Check out the Mother’s Day greeting cards for all sorts of moms— mom friends, moms, mothers-in-law— they’ve got over at Tiny Prints. You want to tell her she’s doing a great job as a mom or thank her for being there for you? They have the card for that (including one that says Hey Mom, I Blame You. **snicker**).

    100% of their photo cards, products and packaging now feature eco-friendly recycled paper, from beautiful stationery created with custom-made Signature Recycled Matte paper to green invitations printed on Forest Stewardship Council-certified Smooth Matte paper. Plus, not only are they a Certified Green Business, but Tiny Prints works with the Arbor Day Foundation to plant thousands of trees in the U.S. forests to replace all of the trees used to make their paper each year.

    Tiny Prints provides simple, modern and unique stationery from Father’s Day Cards to personalized greeting cards to thank you cards, business cards, and even custom wedding invitations or photo birth announcements. Offering exclusive designs from the nation’s top designers, easy card personalization, a powerful preview engine and top-notch customer service and paper quality, their designs have been lauded by numerous television networks, publications and celebrities. With Tiny Prints by your side commemorating every holiday and momentous occasion is a cinch! They offer perfect party invitations for every occasion and memorable personalized photo-gifts like notebooksphoto books and calendars to commemorate the event.

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    Disclosure: This is a sponsored post. I will receive a Tiny Prints card credit in exchange for writing about my mother’s parenting advice— stay tuned to see how I’ll use that credit to support other moms this Mother’s Day! 🙂

    If you are interested in learning more about my mother’s story, you can find that here.

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  • Karma, and a Hotel Hershey Spa Giveaway

    Karma, and a Hotel Hershey Spa Giveaway

    basket full of chocolate goodness

    “Well, some like to call it luck.
    I like to call it…..well, luck, I guess. So what?!”

    -Adam Sandler as Happy Gilmour

    A few weeks back Jake’s school held an 8th graders vs. teachers basketball game fundraiser. And he really wanted to go.

    I really sort of didn’t; it was on a Thursday night and my work week was already feeling ten days long. But I remember all too well begging my dad to go with me to watch the 8th graders soundly trounce the teachers, so I figured some sort of karmic rebalancing was in order. Jake said it started at 5:45, so I mentally aimed to get there around 6.

    As it turned out, doors opened at 5:45, and the game didn’t start until 7, but karma was on my mind so I kept the grousing to a minimum. We bought our tickets, had a dinner of pizza and hot dogs and the most chemically-tasting, wretched lemonade ever. But everything was raising money for the school athletics programs, so again I (sort of) held my piece.

    Each class in the school had put together a themed basket of goodies, purchased from parental monetary donations or generously donated by local merchants. To burn time, I bought a pile of raffle tickets and the kids filled them out, then dropped them into the boxes in front of the baskets they wanted to win.

    There was a basket of beachy bounty: a weekend stay at a hotel, restaurant gift cards, vouchers for the waterpark and bowling. An Apple basket with an iPod and iTunes gift cards. A “Backyard BBQ” with a (really nice) outdoor grill, grilling tools, a box full of specialized seasonings and rubs and a gift card good at a local butcher.  A “Mom’s Night Out” basket with spa vouchers, dinner gift cards, movie tickets, a bottle of wine. A “Money Tree” that was simply a box with a mystery amount of cash, and a gift certificate good for one fruiting tree from a local nursery. There were about 2 dozen in all, but those are the ones I remember wanting to win.

    Thing is, I often win at these things, but never anything good. I’m always the one who wins the bottle of wine given as the first prize (I don’t drink wine). So then I know I’m not gonna win whatever the grand prize is, but I can’t complain, because I’m one of the relative few that did win something. It’s twisted.

    True to form, I won the Chocolate Basket: about two tons of chocolate in various forms (did I mention I don’t eat chocolate, either?) and a chocolate fountain.

    As I posted immediately to Facebook, “Is there anything in the world I need less?”

    The kids, naturally, were thrilled with the bounty that Lady Luck had bestowed upon them as their Mean Mommy Who Pays the Dentist Bills never would. The various chocolates were devoured in about a week’s time, but the chocolate fountain was held in reserve. The inaugural run of such a delight couldn’t be witnessed by our eyes alone.

    A family gathering for a birthday was soon scheduled, and Jeff & I made a pound cake and cut up bananas and strawberries for dipping. There was a lot of secrecy & grandstanding & drama and then Jeff assembled the fountain in all 21 inches of its glory. The chocolate was added, the fountain began to burble and cascade… and then it broke.

    The children then used the skewers to scratch their names into the frozen chocolate.

    broken chocolate fountain

    This is pretty much the way my luck always works. Just once… I’d like to win the money tree, you know?

    ANYWAY, when I picked up my basket they also gave me an envelope, and I didn’t really give it my full attention until long after the fact. In that envelope?

    A $100 gift card for The Spa at the Hotel Hershey.

    I just went to Hersheypark last year, folks. It’s close enough that I can’t really justify the cost of staying over, but far enough of a drive that I’d want to pack every moment with rides, rather than leave my family to cash in my spa treatment.

    That being said, I LOVE HERSHEY. If you haven’t ever been, I would totally say it’s worth it to stay over, so you have time to not only do the rides, but also the Chocolate Factory, or the Hershey Gardens, or the Hershey Theater, or a concert (coming up this season: Imagination Movers, The Monkees, NKOTB with the Backstreet Boys… also, the Ringling Bros & Bailey circus). The day we were there last summer I think Ke$ha was playing… and lookee here, it looks like they’re running some sort of Kids Stay, Eat & Play Free special in May & June.

    So I’d love for you to help me generate some better karma! No sense letting this card sit around until we’re ready to go back to Hershey, when it would make a great Easter or Mother’s Day gift (or just a nice surprise to keep!) for someone this year.

    Leave me a comment below about karma, or luck, or your favorite chocolate to be entered to win the $100 gift card. “Like” my site’s fan page on Facebook for a second chance to win; just make sure to leave a second comment so you’re counted twice.

    I’ll pull a random winner Sunday morning, April 10th.

    UPDATE: I just looked in the envelope again and there’s another card included that reads: “Present this gift card for purchases at any of the following Hershey Entertainment & Resorts® locations and operations: Hersheypark®, Hersheypark® Arena/Stadium/Star Pavilion, The Hotel Hershey®, Hershey® Lodge, Hershey® Highmeadow Campground, The Shops At The Hotel Hershey®, The Spa At The Hotel Hershey®, Cocoa Beanery®, ZooAmerica® North America Wildlife Park, Hershey Bears®, Giant Center, Hershey® Links, Spring Creek Golf Course, Hershey® Country Club, Hershey Theatre, Hershey Gardens, The Hershey Story, Hershey® Cleaners, Houlihan’s Restaurant + Bar, Devon Seafood Grill, and all Hershey® Resorts Restaurants.” This tempted me to hit “delete” rather than “publish,” but that wouldn’t be very nice of me, would it?

    Helpful links:

    Classic spa treatments at The Spa at the Hotel Hershey. See what you could enjoy with the gift card should you win.

    Experience Hershey, PA. One-stop shopping for everything you need to know about a trip to Hershey.

    Hershey: More Than Just a Chocolate Bar and a Kiss! Local super-blogger Mindi visited Hershey in December and learned about the Milton Hershey School, a school for orphans started by the Hershey founder and still helping at-risk kids a century later. It was something I’d never known about and I just want to take this opportunity to help spread the word a bit.

    They provide free tuition, food, clothing, medical and dental and housing to at-risk children.  AND, if a child graduates from the MHS with at least a 2.5 GPA, you know what they get?  A $80K scholarship to college!  What they are doing for children is nothing short of a miracle.

    It’s nice to feel good buying from a local company… even if you’re afraid to eat the stuff because you’re paranoid about cavities forming around your adult braces.

    Check it! More giveaways this week from Philly Social Media Moms.

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    Disclosure: The good folks at Hershey know nothing about me or this giveaway, and are not affiliated in any way. I won the gift card and just want to pass the love along to keep good chi flowing in my life. Is that a shady motivation? Yeah, perhaps.

    I never said I was perfect, just awesome.

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  • KinderCare Spring Camp: The Secret Science of Dirt

    KinderCare Spring Camp: The Secret Science of Dirt

    kindercare spring break camp

    Children are born true scientists.
    They spontaneously experiment and experience
    and reexperience again.

    They select, combine, and test,
    seeking to find order in their experiences—

    “which is the mostest? which is the leastest?”

    -R. Buckminster Fuller

    It seems impossible that spring break and Easter are only a few weeks off, what with a Nor’easter on its way and the SNOW word being bandied about, but the weatherman assures me that indeed it is coming.

    I’ve been in a state of mild panic about what to do with these kids during their break; Jeff works full-time, I work from home full-time. I can’t take them anywhere fun during the day, but I’m not about to let them sit in front of a screen all day (you know, like I do. Cue guilt). And while I’m cool with “just go outside, boredom is good for you” a few days a week, it seems like an unfair way to spend an entire vacation.

    Happily, while public schools are on break, local KinderCare Spring Camps are in session! We have lots of KinderCare centers in Northern Delaware. I’d always thought they were just for toddlers and preschoolers, but the camp has full-day programs for both preschool and school-aged children.

    And— this was the kicker for me— the theme this year? “The Secret Science of Dirt.”

    Did you know…

    • that some types of monkeys eat dirt?
    • that it can take hundreds or thousands of years to make just one inch of dirt or soil?
    • that soil or dirt can be of different shapes?
    • that one cup of soil may hold as many bacteria as there are people on Earth?
    • that the weight of all the bacteria in one acre of soil can equal the weight of one or two cows?

    I know, right? Dirt is fascinating! I can’t wait until I (I mean, the kids and I) get some free time and can stick some dirt samples from our yard under the microscope.

    Younger kids get five days of hands-on science lessons, veggie cooking, and craft-making, while the school-agers get five days of planting and tending vegetables, making compost, creating garden-related crafts, and preparing veggie treats. At the end of the week there’s a “Dig it! Science Fair” that parents are invited to attend (so stinkin’ cute).

    Looking ahead to summer, they’ve got 12 more themed weeks of educational fun available: Wilderness 101; Dig Ancient Egypt; Wild, Wild West; Scienterrific; Spectacular Sports; Animal Antics; Gross and Gooey Science; Kids’ Kitchen; Sports Smarts; Art Expo; Splish Splash! and Feats of Science.

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    When I was in high school, I was part of a traveling chemistry road show and performed some simple experiments for grade-school kids. Like any normal 16yo, I signed up for this because it got me out of school for an hour or two once a month, but I really really enjoyed it, because kids of that age eat that stuff up. At first it seems like magic, but when you break down the processes to whatever their comprehension level is (and folks, it’s higher than you think) you just see the dawn break, you can hear the click in their minds as it all slots into place. And then they’re racing to apply that new knowledge in as many other places as they can think of.

    It’s such an amazing and exciting thing to experience, and I’m so excited that Cass will get a chance to do some hands-on science in a fun environment, making new friends in the process. (Yes, I could do all these activities at home, but that’s not as cool, is it? I WISH. I’m hoping the third-party wow factor will make science experiment time with MOM more fun. Not that MOM isn’t willing to do them all by herself, because Mom is a total nerd like that.)

    Teaching should be such
    that what is offered is perceived as a valuable gift
    and not as a hard duty.


    -Albert Einstein

    Want all the dirt on KinderCare camps? All ya had to do was ask:

    KinderCare Spring Camp: The Secret Science of Dirt

    KinderCare Summer Camp: 12 week-long camps make kids the experts

    and while I’m thinking about it, you should totally check out the documentary Dirt! The Movie, which is available for streaming on Netflix. You’ll learn lots of cool facts about dirt and its importance, and the implications of the way we’ve been treating it. But you’ll also be amazed by the passion people have for the land beneath our feet.

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    Disclosure time! KinderCare is sending Cassidy to a week of spring or summer camp (depends on availability). Although a review of that week is not required of me, you know I’ll be sharing all the details with you. Cass is excited!

    So, now what to do with the boys? Aged 10 and 13, any ideas?

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