Categories
Parenting

Kitchen experiments with the kids – just the thing for half-term

Edible slime, jelly worms, ‘unicorn noodles’: what better way to entertain children than by making a mess in the name of science?

The last time I did science in the home with an 11-year-old, something happened that I can’t tell you about until the person whose chair it was has died. That is my abiding conclusion about the natural sciences: they stain, and don’t let anybody ever tell you they won’t.

Nevertheless, I have just undertaken science in the kitchen – nudged by a new book, The Kitchen Science Cookbook by Michelle Dickinson – because I have exhausted all the other ways of getting them to join me there. “This dish reminds me of evenings spent making bechamel with my mother, her apron brushing against my cheek as we spake of fat and its magical alchemy,” said every cookbook ever, but my parenting is much more in the Johnny Ball style: “Kids, you can’t teach them anything, but they learn everything from you.” I’m still in phase one: they will not touch my wisdom with a bargepole. C, 11, will enter the kitchen for anything that ends in a cake, but then we just end up with a load of cake. H, nine, will promise me the moon on a stick, then get distracted by a bee. T, 11, thinks it is emasculating to crack an egg. It wasn’t for the science that I tried a new tack; it was just for the company. Plus it was half-term, and you have to keep them occupied somehow.

Continue reading…

Read more: theguardian.com

Categories
Parenting

How to be a Perfect Parent and Raise the Perfect Child (Parody)


How to be a Perfect Parent
The Parenting Junkie will teach us exactly how to be a perfect parent. In this video you will receive perfect parenting advice. Do you long to be a perfect parent? Do you want to know how to raise perfect kids? Then you are in luck, in this video you will learn what exactly it takes to raise perfect kids by learning how to be the perfect parent. Learn how to be a perfect mother including how to have the perfect birth. Learn how to be a perfect mom and how to raise a perfect child. Once you learn how to raise the perfect child you will be the envy of all your mom friends. You too can learn how to raise perfect children. Included in this video on how to raise the perfect kid you’ll also discover how to find the perfect sleeping arrangement including the perfect sleeping schedule for baby. Also as children grow older you will need the perfect education plan which is outlined in this video as well. Perfect parenting is the only way to guarantee you have perfect children. If you’ve made it this far I have a mini spoiler alert: perfect parents don’t exist.

1:25 – How to use this book to guarantee your success in raising the perfect child
1:54 – The perfect birth you need to have in order to be a perfect parent (including who should definitely attend your birth)
2:38 – The perfect sleeping arrangement and sleep schedule in order to raise the perfect child
3:15 – The perfect 4th trimester plan in order to be the perfect parent including the perfect babywearing and tummy time plan
3:56 – The perfect wardrobe in order to be the perfect parent including nursing wear options
4:28 – The perfect potty learning plan to raise the perfect child
4:54 – The perfect restrictions (including sugar and screens) to ensure you raise the perfect child
5:33 – The perfect education plan to guarantee a perfect child – and therefore that you are the perfect parent
6:14 – The ultimate lesson to ensure you are the perfectly present parent in order to raise the absolutely perfect child

↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓

💬 COMMENTS are currently disabled on my channel, so leave them on the blog! (https://www.theparentingjunkie.com/how-to-be-a-perfect-parent/)

JOIN OUR MAILING LIST: http://www.theparentingjunkie.com/newsletter

↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓

★ JOIN THE RECLAIM PLAY CHALLENGE! (https://www.theparentingjunkie.com/challenge)

↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓

RECOMMEND TO WATCH / LISTEN TO NEXT:
► Diaper Free Babies (Elimination Communication) (https://youtu.be/4qu8KKYvOJg)
► Why I Want to Unschool (https://youtu.be/mlJ0rlMlIxY)
► How to be More Anxious (Parody) (https://youtu.be/VpebUsHEVu4)
►Judgmental Parenting (Parody) (https://youtu.be/-NonPGY-UOk)

↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓

#1. ★ SUBSCRIBE ♡ TO THIS CHANNEL
(https://www.youtube.com/user/theparentingjunkie?sub_confirmation=1)

#2. ★ SUBSCRIBE ♡ TO THE PODCAST!
(http://www.theparentingjunkie.com/podcast)

#3. ★ JOIN ♡ OUR FACEBOOK COMMUNITY
(https://www.theparentingjunkie.com/loveparenting)

#4. ★ FOLLOW ♡ ON INSTAGRAM @PARENTINGJUNKIE
(https://instagram.com/parentingjunkie)

↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓

★★★ SHARE RIGHT NOW! ★★★
Tweet with One Click→ https://ctt.ac/M9UV0

Say HI! on Social Media:
★ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/parentingjunkie/
★ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/theparentingjunkie
★ Twitter: https://twitter.com/parentingjunkie

#parentingjunkie #perfectparent #parentingjunkiebook

https://youtu.be/E-4wr5lLsGs

Read more: youtube.com

Categories
Parenting

Postpartum Mindset // How to Process Your Birth & Overcome the Baby Blues


Postpartum Mindset // How to Process Your Birth & Overcome the Baby Blues

The Parenting Junkie explains the postpartum mindset. This video will give advice about postpartum mindset for new mom and postpartum mindset for first time mom. The parenting junkie will also discuss how to process your birth and process your birth story. This includes how to process your traumatic birth. This video also gives tips to overcome the baby blues. If you have more than the baby blues and know you have postpartum depression it is best to seek professional help. With the right help you can overcome postpartum depression and get help with baby blues. Birth is a big experience and a lot of people can have a post-traumatic birth that they need to process. In this video you’ll get tips for how to process your birth and how to overcome the baby blues. Being at home with a newborn can leave you feeling depressed after having a baby and if you had a birth trauma you can even have PTSD after childbirth. With some mindset shifts and help you can not only get through this baby blues time but also feel better.

If you feel you have PPD please get help [1:37]
We all go through seasons of feeling down or depressed [2:31]
My Experience [5:11]
Find someone to talk to [7:35]
Don’t hide the fact that you’re having trouble [8:15]
This too shall pass [13:19]
Get Curious [16:50]
Connect with Others [17:47]

JOIN OUR MAILING LIST: http://www.theparentingjunkie.com/newsletter

★ TAKE THE FREE MASTERCLASS ♡ “PEACEFUL TANTRUMS”
(https://www.theparentingjunkie.com/tantrums)

↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓

RECOMMEND TO WATCH / LISTEN TO NEXT:
► How to Get Your High Needs Baby to Sleep (https://youtu.be/Shw5eGxyXdY)
► What Hypnobirthing Taught Me – Laboring and Parenting (https://youtu.be/dWs6JGEshjE)
► Babies – Everything you Need (and Don’t need) (https://youtu.be/rG_V5WgVu94)
► How to Prepare Your Child for a New Baby (https://youtu.be/EqsrqgCjhWM)

↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓

#1. ★ SUBSCRIBE ♡ TO THIS CHANNEL
(https://www.youtube.com/user/theparentingjunkie?sub_confirmation=1)

#2. ★ SUBSCRIBE ♡ TO THE PODCAST!
(http://www.theparentingjunkie.com/podcast)

#3. ★ JOIN ♡ OUR FACEBOOK COMMUNITY
(https://www.theparentingjunkie.com/loveparenting)

#4. ★ FOLLOW ♡ ON INSTAGRAM @PARENTINGJUNKIE
(https://instagram.com/parentingjunkie)

↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓

★★★ SHARE RIGHT NOW! ★★★
Tweet with One Click→ https://ctt.ac/HYS0F

Say HI! on Social Media:
★ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/parentingjunkie/
★ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/theparentingjunkie
★ Twitter: https://twitter.com/parentingjunkie

#parentingjunkie #babyblues #postpartummindset

https://youtu.be/bKjAVzvaS0Q

Read more: youtube.com

Categories
Parenting

Do Something for YOU! Reclaim Peace, Presence, & Play!


Become a Present Play Member! Doors are open now thru May 15th, 2019! (https://www.theparentingjunkie.com/presentplay)
Present Play – Your global village, where intentional parents thrive.

The Parenting Junkie says Do something for YOU! In this video you’ll learn about Present Play! The place to help you reclaim peace, presence, and play for you and your family. You deserve to do something for yourself. You deserve to be a part of a global village on this parenting journey. You deserve to reclaim peace in your home. You deserve to reclaim presence with your children. And you deserve to reclaim play for your family.

As a Present Play member you will be continually inspired and supported to take action in being the parent you want to be and creating a childhood both you and your children enjoy.

What it is: Present Play is an online membership for intentional parents who want to reclaim peace, presence and play for their family. It includes a video library of courses to help you design your spaces, manage your time and treat yourself and your family well. We’ll do the heavy lifting for you and read the parenting books, distilling and summarizing them for you into actionable inspiration.

BECOME A MEMBER (https://www.theparentingjunkie.com/presentplay)

↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓

RECOMMEND TO WATCH / LISTEN TO NEXT:
► Our Playroom Tour // 3 Play Zones Every Kid Needs (https://youtu.be/E8ag-EDKqj4)
► How to Encourage Independent Play (https://youtu.be/_QXq5ggNC98)
►Encouraging Creativity in Our Children (https://youtu.be/Lsf1g8lJYW0)

↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓

#1. ★ SUBSCRIBE ♡ TO THIS CHANNEL
(https://www.youtube.com/user/theparentingjunkie?sub_confirmation=1)

#2. ★ SUBSCRIBE ♡ TO THE PODCAST!
(http://www.theparentingjunkie.com/podcast)

#3. ★ JOIN ♡ OUR FACEBOOK COMMUNITY
(https://www.theparentingjunkie.com/loveparenting)

#4. ★ FOLLOW ♡ ON INSTAGRAM @PARENTINGJUNKIE
(https://instagram.com/parentingjunkie)

↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓

★★★ SHARE RIGHT NOW! ★★★
Tweet with One Click→ https://ctt.ac/U8dCn

Say HI! on Social Media:
★ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/parentingjunkie/
★ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/theparentingjunkie
★ Twitter: https://twitter.com/parentingjunkie

#parentingjunkie #presentplay #globalvillage

Read more: youtube.com

Categories
Parenting

Best last-minute Mother’s Day gifts

TwitterFacebook

Still haven’t gotten mom a Mother’s Day gift, huh? Yeah, turns out that “busy being the perfect child” isn’t an excuse for not getting your mom a present.

Here’s your “oh shit” warning that the big day is May 12. The cutesy personalized gifts from Etsy that take four weeks to ship are out of the question. You’re going to need something that can ship out fast. 

SEE ALSO: Best gifts for mom that are less than $50

Every gift that we’ve listed below has free two-day shipping with Amazon Prime or Walmart — or it’s a subscription and doesn’t have to be shipped at all. Making a big purchase for mom (like a tablet or expensive robot vacuum) would typically require some research on your part, but you don’t exactly have time for that. We made sure to pick the best-of-the-best brands that mom is guaranteed to recognize and love. Read more…

More about Parenting, Moms, Mothers Day, Mashable Shopping, and Gifts For Her


Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint api production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fcard%2fimage%2f979873%2f4f750332 6fc4 4784 a55e 836b8d4632af

IMAGE: AMAZON

$49

The Echo Dot — See Details


Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint api production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fcard%2fimage%2f979898%2fda6220f6 58b0 44aa 8941 3801854941ea

IMAGE: THE BOUQS COMPANY

$36

Flowers from Bouqs — See Details


Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint api production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fcard%2fimage%2f982323%2f1c92e3a8 dfc4 4e9a 82f4 c72c67238bb5

IMAGE: MACY'S

$25

Faux tortoise earrings — See Details


Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint api production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fcard%2fimage%2f979890%2fbe9a3646 55f7 4008 a3a0 2675b079aabd

IMAGE: SLING TV

$25

A Sling TV membership — See Details


Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint api production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fcard%2fimage%2f979879%2f68513829 0fd5 457a 9354 c0ae9d3cd515

IMAGE: LEVOIT

$19.57

A Himalayan salt lamp — See Details


Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint api production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fcard%2fimage%2f981579%2fac682764 598e 4ef7 a407 658988c6eda3

IMAGE: ANCESTRYDNA

$99

An AncestryDNA kit — See Details


Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint api production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fcard%2fimage%2f979901%2fb1b1c4d9 946f 40a3 8a30 cf14d56d91f8

IMAGE: INSTANT POT

$99

A floral Instant Pot — See Details


Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint api production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fcard%2fimage%2f981725%2f4f939a3c 9436 42cb 8b8f 341ae7919d60

IMAGE: AMAZON

$39

An Amazon Prime account — See Details


Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint api production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fcard%2fimage%2f981583%2f97f8f53e 956f 4711 afc0 a283de8f23dd

IMAGE: APPLE

The newest 9.7-inch iPad — See Details


Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint api production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fcard%2fimage%2f980494%2f92f24d64 8b8e 4d44 ae3b e39b990a5880

IMAGE: HOST

$27.49

Self-chilling wine glasses — See Details


Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint api production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fcard%2fimage%2f982345%2f976e98d8 e16e 4541 a8a9 49f591c0bf7f

IMAGE: MYHERITAGE DNA

$69

MyHeritage DNA — See Details


Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint api production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fcard%2fimage%2f980509%2f21e627fc 4bb8 4b8c a745 1ce0b608c959

IMAGE: PHILIPS

$139.99

A sunrise alarm clock — See Details


Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint api production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fcard%2fimage%2f980505%2f52545347 5dfd 4f03 9a96 1b5a70a3fc2f

IMAGE: AMAZON

$9.99

A Kindle Unlimited membership — See Details


Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint api production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fcard%2fimage%2f979892%2f80ff5510 ca54 4453 ac91 8345e63cdfa2

IMAGE: EDIBLE ARRANGEMENTS

$29.99

Edible Arrangements — See Details


Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint api production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fcard%2fimage%2f981629%2f773f6b17 2c12 4d06 adef 8c40d62f3886

IMAGE: GROUPON

$20

A "me" day from Groupon — See Details


Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint api production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fcard%2fimage%2f982359%2fd1264bc4 0745 4c4a b835 a22c8e2e88d4

IMAGE: 1-800-FLOWERS

A bouquet from 1-800-Flowers — See Details


Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint api production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fcard%2fimage%2f981723%2f25bca4f3 aae6 4179 978e aadd050ff77f

IMAGE: IROBOT

$374.99

A Roomba — See Details


Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint api production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fcard%2fimage%2f980496%2f52ef6086 777e 4584 a648 27a3e1da7841

IMAGE: HYPERCHILLER

$29.99

The HyperChiller — See Details


Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint api production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fcard%2fimage%2f980489%2fa840bade a1e8 4058 bec9 009d212b433b

IMAGE: FITBIT

$99.95

The Fitbit Inspire — See Details


Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint api production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fcard%2fimage%2f980512%2f3e094ecc 3c20 4adf b4c4 dc92d2e55e7e

IMAGE: YNM

$79.9

A weighted blanket — See Details


Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint api production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fcard%2fimage%2f980498%2f9993358b 53d0 40f2 9aba 7c0eff9cbe37

IMAGE: ROYAL CRAFT WOOD

$44.97

A bathtub tray — See Details


Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint api production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fcard%2fimage%2f981593%2fcc36cd7c 64cf 4400 ac43 c7ea739dd3a0

IMAGE: S'WELL

$35

A patterned water bottle — See Details


Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint api production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fcard%2fimage%2f981719%2f08b7cbb9 8dc6 4d3a bb4a c3acc35730c4

IMAGE: GARMIN

$229.95

A new car GPS — See Details


Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint api production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fcard%2fimage%2f981455%2f8959d7dc b7ec 4c56 afeb 519f962de3e5

IMAGE: AMAZON

$229.99

The Echo Show — See Details

Read more: mashable.com

Categories
Baby Parenting

Medications during pregnancy and breastfeeding

An estimated 83% of new mothers in the United States breast-feed at some time during the postpartum period. Globally, more than half of women take one or more medications in the months after delivery — and the figure may be much higher in the United States.  Using the more conservative estimate of 50%, up to 1.5 million lactating women who gave birth in the United States in 2017 and their infants were exposed to medications and their potential effects. But since few clinical studies have explored the effects of drugs on lactation or on lactating women and their children,  health care providers often lack the evidence they need to counsel women on medication safety and breast-feeding.

Over the past several decades, various organizations have recognized the paucity of data in this area and tried to address it. In 1983, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) Committee on Drugs identified and reviewed the secretion of pharmacologic agents in breast milk and the potential effects on infants, and the AAP issued subsequent consensus reports on this topic in 1989, 1994, and 2001.

In 2006, the National Library of Medicine launched the online database LactMed (lactmed.nlm.nih.gov), which has been critical in providing both clinicians and patients with information on the effects of various drugs on lactation and on the levels of these substances in breast milk and infant blood. LactMed relies on a consensus panel to review the scientific literature about individual medications; the panel then makes educated decisions regarding which medications may be safe during lactation, which medications require lactating women to discard their breast milk, and which medications may be suitable alternatives to those currently used.

Regrettably, the information available to guide these decisions is limited at best: 54% of the 1408 products in the LactMed database as of November 2018 had accompanying recommendations that were based on no lactation-specific data, and only 2% had recommendations that were based on strong data. Similarly, when the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) looked at 575 prescription drug and biologic products with labelling approved between 2015 and 2017, it found that only 15% of products included data on human lactation.  Lactation-related post marketing studies had been performed for only 11 products, and these studies enrolled a combined total of 27 lactating women.

The importance of including pregnant and lactating women in clinical research has been recognized since at least 1985, when it was addressed in a report by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Task Force on Women’s Health Issues. It wasn’t until two decades later, however, that the FDA published guidance for industry on conducting studies in lactating women, and another 10 years elapsed before the agency sponsored national meetings on the safety of drugs used during lactation.

Finally, in 2017, the 21st Century Cures Act established the Task Force on Research Specific to Pregnant Women and Lactating Women to evaluate the safety of medications and biologic products used during pregnancy and lactation and provide recommendations to the secretary of HHS.

The group’s report, published in September 2018, highlights the lack of data on the safe use of medications for pregnant and lactating women. In a review of original research-based articles published between 2006 and 2017 — including basic science and pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic studies; randomized, controlled trials; cohort studies; and case series and reports — the report identified roughly 7000 articles related to pregnancy and only 340 addressing lactation.

In keeping with these findings, federal funding allocated to research on breast-feeding, lactation, and breast milk has been extremely limited. In 2017, National Institutes of Health (NIH) funding for research on these topics totalled $92 million, or 0.3% of the agency’s budget. In comparison, the NIH spent almost $6 billion on cancer research and $1.1 billion on diabetes research.

Medications used during lactation are considered “on label” when they are used for an indication for which the FDA has approved their use in nonlactating women. Women with hypertension, for example, commonly take antihypertensive medications during pregnancy and post partum. Unfortunately, although studies of the effects of such medications in lactating women are feasible,  the lack of existing data hinders both dosing and counseling.

Changes in women’s physiology and in milk composition during the postpartum period add to the complexity of optimizing dosing and evaluating safety. In addition to studies on maternal pharmacology and transfer of substances to infants, there is a need for research that captures the effect of changing maternal physiology as well as differences in the levels of various medications in foremilk (initial milk) and hindmilk.

Another challenge facing lactating women and their physicians is that some lactation-specific conditions, such as inadequate milk supply, lack FDA-approved therapies. As a result, women use medications approved for other conditions or dietary supplements to address lactation-related issues. For example, metoclopramide, a medication used in gastroesophageal reflux disease, is commonly used off label in the United States for increasing milk supply.

Its efficacy for this indication is unclear, however, and it carries a risk of serious side effects, including depression and heart palpitations. The herbal supplement fenugreek has also been cited as improving milk supply, but dietary supplements don’t require FDA review or approval. The effect of such products on long-term maternal and child health is therefore unknown.

Despite these challenges, there are opportunities that could substantially improve our understanding of the effects of medications on lactation. Since many women take both prescription and non-prescription medications while breast-feeding, opportunistic studies are a viable option for evaluating dosing, efficacy, and safety. Inclusion of lactating women in phase 1 and 2 clinical trials would also provide information regarding dosing and efficacy.

Studies focused on pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics can be performed on fairly small cohorts of patients and still provide data regarding drug dosing and safety.  These studies could be followed by larger-scale, phase 3 and 4 clinical trials for indicated therapies.

The benefits of breast-feeding for both mothers and infants have been well documented and include reduced infant morbidity and mortality and lower rates of childhood infections, leukaemia, obesity, and diabetes; potentially improved cognitive development among children; and reduced rates of maternal premenopausal breast cancer, diabetes, and osteoporosis.

We are fortunate that in the United States, barriers to breast-feeding have been reduced as a result of federal efforts to facilitate lactation in the workplace.  Finally, as of 2018, all 50 states have laws that specifically allow women to breast-feed in any public or private location. In addition, professional societies such as the AAP recommend exclusive breast-feeding for the first 6 months after birth.

Given the national push to encourage breast-feeding, women who are lactating will probably represent a growing percentage of the population. Despite this trend, we are no closer to answering the question, “Is it safe?” for many medications used during lactation. In the absence of clinical and pharmacologic studies that include pregnant and lactating women, health care providers will continue to counsel their pregnant and lactating patients without adequate information on the safety, efficacy, and appropriate dosing of therapeutic products. Given the ultimate impact of breast-feeding on more than 80% of the U.S. population, efforts to fill the void with definitive conclusions about safety are critical for public health.

MEDICATIONS YOU’RE TAKING ARE SAFE IS ALWAYS IMPORTANT. BUT DURING PREGNANCY AND BREASTFEEDING EXPERTS SAY THE CONVERSATION SHOULD BE AN EVEN BIGGER PRIORITY. IN TONIGHT’S HEALTHBEAT, KELOLAND’S SOPHIE ONE STEP TO MAKE SURE HER BABY ARRIVED HEALTHY WAS CHECKING WITH HER DOCTOR TO SEE IF HER MEDICATIONS WERE SAFE. “WITH ANY MEDICATION THERE’S CONCERNS EVEN IF YOU’RE NOT PREGNANT, AND SO TO BE ABLE TO ASK MY DOCTOR ABOUT THOSE IS VERY HELPFUL,” BAKER SAID. NOW THAT BAKER’S BREASTFEEDING HER DAUGHTER THE CONCERN ABOUT MEDICATIONS DOESN’T GO AWAY. “IF YOU GET A THING TO CONSIDER WHEN IT COMES TO MEDICATIONS DURING PREGNANCY OR BREASTFEEDING IS THE RISK VERSUS THE BENEFIT. “WHAT ARE THE BENEFITS OF THE MEDICATION? AND DO THE BENEFITS OUTWEIGH THE RISK TO YOU AND BABY,” DR.

ABREA ROARK SAID. WOMEN WHO TAKE PRESCRIPTION MEDICATIONS AND BECOME PREGNANT SHOULDN’T IMMEDIATELY DISCONTINUE TAKING THEM. INSTEAD DR. ABREA ROARK SAYS THEY SHOULD SPEAK WITH THEIR DOCTOR ABOUT WHAT THE SAFEST HEALTH PLAN IS FIRST. “I THINK COMMONLY WE’LL HAVE A LOT OF PATIENTS ON AN ANTI-DEPRESSANT OR SOMETHING ON THE SSRI SPECTRUM. A LOT OF THOSE MEDICATIONS, WOMEN WOULD DO BETTER IF THEY WEANED THEM,” ROARK SAID. IF YOU’RE BREASTFEEDING, SHE SAYS IT’S IMPORTANT TO MAKE SURE YOUR DOCTOR KNOWS, TO BE SURE YOU’RE GETTING A MEDICATION THAT IS SAFE FOR YOU AND YOUR BABY. “I DO THINK OVERALL A LOT OF OUR MEDICATIONS ARE PRETTY SAFE IN BREASTFEEDING.

LIKE THE EXCRETION WOULD HAVE TO BE REALLY HIGH TO HAVE BABIES BE AFFECTED, EVEN WITH MOMS ON ANTIBIOTICS OR YOU KNOW, STEROIDS,” ROARK SAID. ROARK SAYS WHETHER IT’S OVER THE COUNTER OR PRESCRIPTION, TALKING WITH YOUR DOCTOR CAN HELP PROVIDE THE SAFEST PREGNANCY PLAN FOR YOU. WITH HEALTHBEAT.

As found on Youtube

Categories
Parenting

I don’t want my bullying mother on our holiday. Am I being unfair? | Dear Mariella

Your marriage has been hijacked enough, says Mariella Frostrup. Stop taking on your mother’s problems

The dilemma I’m 50 soon. I’m happily married, I have friends and my work is fulfilling – but I’m desperate. My mother has Avoidant Personality Disorder. She’s getting therapy, which she says won’t work. She never remarried or had a relationship since I was a baby, and she has no friends. Over the past few years, my husband and I have taken her on holiday. Now she keeps hinting that my husband “needs a holiday” – I know exactly what she means. I don’t know how to tell her that we need time to ourselves. She looks for chinks in my armour and is delighted when I’m wrong. I’m exhausted by her bullying, catastrophising and ridiculous silent treatment. I can stand up to her, but she denies her bad behaviour. She hit me once – she knew she’d gone too far and could see I was angry. She uses her illnesses, jealousy and loneliness as a lever against us. I’m forever treading on eggshells. I want a holiday, with my husband, alone, but it feels like I’m asking for too much. I feel like a crap daughter.

Mariella replies You’re certainly not. Though if you stopped accepting your mother’s load as though it were your own you might be an even better one. Supporting her struggle to lead a normal life is the decent thing to do, enabling her not to have to confront her peccadilloes is altogether different. There is a natural evolution in the relationship between parent and child that culminates in the end of dependence, but hopefully not of love and mutual care. It’s a clear line that needs to be respected on both sides of the generational divide and my sense here is that her situation has engulfed you in a tangled jungle of compassion, responsibility and guilt.

Continue reading…

Read more: theguardian.com

Categories
Parenting

10 Parenting Practices to Stop (don’t worry, I’ve done them too)


DON’T SOLVE CHILD BEHAVIOR WITH THESE 10 PARENTING PRACTICES
The Parenting Junkie says DON’T solve child behavior with these 10 parenting practices. These are all common, mainstream parenting practices to stop and why not time out and the reason why not spank. Rooted in the teachings of Alfie Kohn and his book called Punished by Rewards, you’ll get new insight on why mindful parenting is the gateway to connection. The problem with mainstream parenting is that it doesn’t start with the question of how to raise an empathic child. Instead of behavior modification, teaching empathy to kids has long lasting impact. Teaching mindfulness to children informs you why not label kids and the problem with reward systems for kids. So if you wonder what’s wrong with behavior charts, don’t compare your child and get some tips from Dr Laura Markham while you’re at it.

My Thoughts on these Mainstream Parenting Practices:
1. Physical Punishments / Spanking [1:13]
2. Threatening [3:34]
3. Time Outs [4:38]
4. Punishments vs Consequences [6:00]
5. Bribes [8:12]
6. Shaming [9:55]
7. Reward Systems & Sticker Charts [12:02]
8. Comparisons [13:33]
9. Yelling [16:15]
10. Begging, Guilting & Pleading [16:49] & the Whole Point of Peaceful Parenting

★ TAKE THE FREE MASTERCLASS ♡ “PEACEFUL TANTRUMS”
(https://www.theparentingjunkie.com/tantrums)

♡ Spread this message by subscribing, liking and sharing!

#1. ★ SUBSCRIBE ♡ TO THIS CHANNEL
(https://www.youtube.com/user/theparentingjunkie?sub_confirmation=1)

#2. ★ SUBSCRIBE ♡ TO THE PODCAST!
(http://www.theparentingjunkie.com/podcast)

***COMMENT ON SOCIAL MEDIA!****

#3. ★ JOIN ♡ OUR FACEBOOK COMMUNITY
(https://www.theparentingjunkie.com/loveparenting)

#4. ★ FOLLOW ♡ ON INSTAGRAM @PARENTINGJUNKIE
(https://instagram.com/parentingjunkie)

RECOMMEND TO WATCH / LISTEN TO NEXT:
► Spanking (https://youtu.be/jYlcpTPlkN0)
► Forget Time Outs, Try Time Ins (https://youtu.be/R4-3oNMJmP8)
► Punishments vs Consequences (https://youtu.be/ZYwuetdf_Wg)
► Why Labeling is Disabling (https://youtu.be/c7dkWZXBVgA)
► What Do Punishments Teach? (https://youtu.be/mmeZlu_s_rY)
► PODCAST: Consequences (https://www.theparentingjunkie.com/podcast_type/consequences/)

★★★ SHARE RIGHT NOW! ★★★
Tweet with One Click→ https://ctt.ac/f7reT

Say HI! on Social Media:
★ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/parentingjunkie/
★ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/theparentingjunkie
★ Twitter: https://twitter.com/parentingjunkie

#parentingjunkie #mindfulparenting #whynotpunish

Read more: youtube.com

Categories
Parenting

High Life review – Robert Pattinson heads for infinity and beyond | Peter Bradshaw’s film of the week

An astronaut on an odyssey to a distant black hole faces the challenges of parenting – and existential panic – in Claire Denis’ superbly eerie, mysterious space drama

Claire Denis’s deep space trauma High Life is an Old Testament parable catapulted forward into the 23rd century, a primal scene in a pressurised cabin of sci-fi pessimism, suppressed horror and denied panic. As if in a recurring dream, Denis brings us repeatedly to the image of a cream-panelled spaceship corridor that curves sharply around to the right; the area is at first pristine and then, as the years go by, shabby and derelict, stained with what may be body fluids. And what is around that corner?

This is a bizarre new creationist myth for those of us who ever wondered in childhood, and then forgot to wonder, about the taboo-breaking involved in propagating a race from just two people in the Garden of Eden, or two species representatives in the ark. It is also a tale of imperial expansion and sexual beings under pressure, just as in earlier Denis movies such as Beau Travail (1999) or White Material (2009); this is written by Denis with Jean-Pol Fargeau, Geoff Cox and Nick Laird, shot with luminous mystery by cinematographer Yorick Le Saux, with an eerie musical score by Stuart Staples of the band Tindersticks.

Continue reading…

Read more: theguardian.com

Categories
Parenting

5 Decluttering Mistakes to Avoid (STOP SABOTAGING YOUR EFFORTS!)


5 Decluttering Mistakes to Avoid // Stop Sabotaging Your Efforts!

The Parenting Junkie shares with us common decluttering mistakes we all make. After watching this you’ll know which decluttering mistakes to avoid. Specifically this video will address 5 decluttering mistakes. After learning these 5 decluttering mistakes to avoid you’ll be on your way to a more minimalist and clean space. Before you declutter you should definitely watch this so you know which decluttering mistakes to avoid. These tips also include decluttering with kids and whether or not you should involve them in the decluttering toys process. This will help you overcome decluttering obstacles and the various decluttering challenges you have faced thus far in your decluttering efforts. Keep trying to declutter but getting stuck – consider this your decluttering troubleshooting guide. These decluttering tips can also be applied to decluttering for kids. By learning how not to declutter you’ll be able to better focus your decluttering efforts. As many items can be sentimental with kids these decluttering for moms tips will help you learn what not to do so you can keep the clutter out. After this video you’ll be on your way knowing how to declutter and be able to put your decluttering ideas into practice.

↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓

★ ★ ★ JOIN THE RECLAIM PLAY CHALLENGE & get your *FREE PDF eBook & exclusive video* now (April 15 – May 5) (https://www.theparentingjunkie.com/challenge)

↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑

💬 COMMENTS are currently disabled on my channel, so leave them on the blog!
(https://www.theparentingjunkie.com/decluttering-mistakes-to-avoid/)

↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓

RECOMMEND TO WATCH / LISTEN TO NEXT:
► Minimalism and Toys – the only 10 TOYS you “need” (https://youtu.be/YTYcWpPW2mk)
► Simplicity Parenting – Which Toys to Get Rid of (https://youtu.be/hSM1RFTDvW0)
► 7 Reasons We Have Too Many Toys // Behind the Scenes Playroom Declutter
(https://youtu.be/mmHghjR_6O0)
► Minimalist Mom Capsule Wardrobe // How to Declutter Your Clothes, Mama
(https://youtu.be/UPVfwOJXAEA)
► Minimalism for Kids // Why It’s Important (https://youtu.be/Jj0y_TZFwY8)

↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓

#1. ★ SUBSCRIBE ♡ TO THIS CHANNEL
(https://www.youtube.com/user/theparentingjunkie?sub_confirmation=1)

#2. ★ SUBSCRIBE ♡ TO THE PODCAST!
(http://www.theparentingjunkie.com/podcast)

#3. ★ JOIN ♡ OUR FACEBOOK COMMUNITY
(https://www.theparentingjunkie.com/loveparenting)

#4. ★ FOLLOW ♡ ON INSTAGRAM @PARENTINGJUNKIE
(https://instagram.com/parentingjunkie)

↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓

★★★ SHARE RIGHT NOW! ★★★
Tweet with One Click→ https://ctt.ac/Lf7rt

Say HI! on Social Media:
★ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/parentingjunkie/
★ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/theparentingjunkie
★ Twitter: https://twitter.com/parentingjunkie

#parentingjunkie #declutteringmistakes #minimalismwithkids

https://youtu.be/v7Uvrx8RtyE

Read more: youtube.com

>
Malcare WordPress Security