Friday, December 14, 2012

Sandy Hook, Ct, tragedy less due to pre-training of staff and children

Role playing, practice, and calmly discussing possible tragedies, even with young children, help when tragedy actually happens as it did today. The educators wisely practiced disaster training which saved many lives.

I remember during my elementary school years in the 60's of practicing "Duck & Cover," at least monthly. The teacher would announce it, and we would hide under our desks until the teacher said it was okay to come out. We knew the danger would be from nuclear fallout due to the Cold War with Russia. We didn't need to understand it. In actuality, "Duck & Cover" would not have saved us, but the more important issue was the feeling of empowerment we received by feeling we had some control over what to do when bad things happen.

Due to disaster in other schools, Sandy Hook schools, along with many others nationwide, have a disaster plan which gives children the power they need to feel they are helping while also knowing when it is time to obey the directions given by those in authority.

In 1989, I lived in Sioux City, Iowa, when Flight 232 crash landed at the local airport. Due to the magnificent skill of the pilot, only 111 died of the 296 passengers. A disaster drill was held previously due to the insistence of Gary Brown, the Woodbury County Disaster Services Director. The drill included members of the on site Air Guard, hospital on guard, plus fire departments from small towns. The day of the actual crash, we saw ambulances driving to the airport, and  hoped it was a drill. The practice and team work was fundamental in limiting the loss of life during that tragedy

Preparation is the key. A serious look at our mental health services and identifying potential problems may be a solution.

As a parent and grandparent, my heart goes out to all the families involved.

Friday, December 7, 2012

My Favorite Christmas Memory



At this time of year, parents everywhere are trying to make a Christmas-to-remember for their children. Stop trying so hard. Memories are made from the simple joys we share with others. 

My favorite one is when I was young. All five of us, my parents and us 3 girls sat together at the dining room table, laughing and joking over the gift box we'd received. We slowly sampled each triangle of cheese wrapped in foil, sliced the salami, and ate on saltine crackers. Vocally, without fear of a scolding, we each commented about the cheese we liked best. Dad preferred the stinky kind. Mom preferred the white ones. I liked the mild orange ones. We all loved the salami. The saltine crackers were just fine for us.

My dad worked for a cattle company. Every Christmas, he would bring home gifts from the many trucking companies who hauled the cattle to and fro for them. Besides a large gift box of cheese, there would always be a huge, several layer box of Peggy Ann chocolates. After the holidays and the box of chocolates remained in the refrigerator, one of my sisters, who I won’t snitch on by name, would sneak into the box and poke a fingernail in the bottom of each remaining chocolate until she found her favorites. Coal should have been in her stocking the next year, but never was.

The tradition of opening the cheese gift box came at the end of a long day. Both parents worked together to make us a lovely supper. We unwrapped gifts, attended the Christmas Eve Candlelight Vigil at our church, and sang Christmas carols. It was a lovely tradition.

Many years later, my mother confided in me of her struggle to spend the same amount of money on each child to equal the same number of gifts. It was important to her and not realized by her children. During the years the cattle business did not do well, she secretly made trips to the local Goodwill and repainted used toys for us in the garage. We never knew. Back then, commercials were not so strongly targeted. Children did not demand the latest, hottest new toy or gadget for Christmas.

My mother is gone now. It saddens me to think how hard she worked to make Christmas special for my sisters and I. Her own childhood holiday memories were the good fortune to receive her own orange and a few pieces of candy in her large family of 8. When our town began the annual tradition to create food baskets for the needy, Mom was first in line to help pack and deliver them in hopes of ensuring no child would be hungry at Christmas.

Dad is now 92, still able to live at home, with the help of my sister. I plan to send him a cheese basket with salami and crackers and instructions to not open until we arrive. Together, we can sample the cheeses, eat the salami, and enjoy the fancy crackers they now include in such gifts. We will talk of the old days and be proud of the grandchildren and great-grandchildren that have such a bright future before them. All because of a man who worked so hard to provide for his family and a woman who made lasting impressions shaping the giving spirit continued today through her daughters.

Monday, November 19, 2012

A car-less family encourages me to blog



It’s been a long time since my last post. Time goes by so swiftly, now that I’m older. But I still find myself waiting. I wait for my husband to come home from work to know when to start supper. I wait for my adult children to call to find out about their lives. I wait for an actual handwritten letter from someone I know to be in my mailbox. I wait for my numbers to win on Powerball. This week it is at $214 million. Ahhhh, my husband could retire and I could stop waiting for more of my books to sell (singleparentwisdom.com; e-books at smashwords.com). I could buy a resort on a lake in a warm climate and hire someone to run it. Then I could live the resort-life forever. Someday, maybe.

This blog began as advice for young parents to complement my book series, Single Parent Wisdom: If only I knew then, what I know now. With that goal, I did not add to it unless I specifically had advice or wisdom to share. That philosophy changes today from a television show I just watched. I listened to Corbyn Hightower and her family on The Jeff Probst Show. The television was on as usual while I was on my laptop checking out my email accounts, etc. Mondays are my accomplish-little days. Mrs. Hightower related how she had lost her 6-figure income and sold the family car. Now they were living in a lower-rent house and riding bicycles everywhere. Plus, growing their own food in a small garden. The Probst show discovered her through her blog about the recession and the changes her family has made. Hmmmmm.

Mrs. Hightower writes well, more poetically than I. She blogs about her life on her iPhone that she has not given up. That sounds like a good idea to get me blogging more often. The more I write, the better I feel, as it empties my brain of random thoughts, and the organized ones, too. I have been stymied by my son’s advice that I need a vibrant, possibly shocking, title for each blog submission in order to draw in searchers looking for a good story. That task has often stopped me from blogging all-together. Plus, I thought blogs should be short and to the point, but after reading Hightower’s blog, I guess not.

A 6-figure income I have never had, even when I actually worked full-time and included my husband’s income, whichever husband it may have been at any time. Five figures was the most our income tax returns ever showed, and that was truly all our income. No unreported cash payments for work lurking in the shadows so the accountant could not see the glowing dollar signs.

Now I have a new goal that will make me feel better by writing my thoughts and hope you will enjoy reading as you learn more about my life and my philosophies. You were probably expecting the singular word, philosophy. I have found one philosophy only covers one area, for example, the philosophy showing your preference of how you teach others. We all teach, whether our paycheck states it or not. How we share the information we possess or learn from a book  is indicated by our teaching philosophy. Perhaps I’ll write more about that later.

So many topics. So little time. I look forward to talking to you soon. We will learn from each other.

Saturday, July 21, 2012

Heat Wave Alters Summer Fun for Children

I'm a big advocate of children spending time outdoors. I remember as a young parent getting tired of the squabbling, whining, cries of boredom when children are inside too long. The noise level would force me to say, "Go outside and play." Outside holds a world of mystery to adventurers discovering a trail of ants, climbing a tree, fishing, playing hide and seek, watching the progress of the new plants growing in the vegetable garden.

Now I have grandchildren and this new world of electronics has invaded their lives and my home, Once again the noise level causes me to say, "Go outside and play." I enjoy an occasional game of Wii Sports, but all day long? And now the children have their own handheld video games, DS somethings. Enough! The outside is calling. Except...

This summer we are faced with daily outrageous heat, so what is a parent/grandparent to do?
Inside ideas:
* Find a deck of cards. Slapjack, Go Fish, UNO, Gin come to mind. Play a game 10 times and declare a winner. Post the name of the winner on the wall. Or make up silly rules for a new game. When a Queen is played, everyone must stand up, turn around, and sit down. When a 2 is played, everyone changes seats with the player on their right. What else can you think of? Be sure to let the children come up with their own ideas and play with them. It's good for children to see adults be silly.
* Get out the board games. Play a round of each game. (You may have to play with them to get the fun going.) Or the children can make up new rules for a game. (Someone could write down the new rules before play starts, so a creative child doesn't change the rules midgame.)
* Marching Band, if you can handle the noise for a short while. Everyone grabs an instrument, toys, pans, whistles, spoons, whatever you can find in the house. One person is the drum major, leading the band. March around the house, upstairs, downstairs, all through the house.
* Put on a play. The children can find a favorite book, or remember a favorite story and act it out. You can be the audience.
* Go for a train ride. Line up the chairs in the house, one for each participant. Take turns being the engineer riding in the first chair and the brakeman riding in the last chair, the Caboose. Where is the train heading? What sights do you see out of the train's windows? Is something on the track so the train has to come to a sudden halt?
* Superhero. Each child becomes their favorite superhero. It is okay to have several Supermen. A dish towel can serve as a cape. What magic powers do the heroes possess? I hear a doll in distress. Can someone help?
Outside ideas:
* Visit the local pool or a lake for an hour.
* Play outside in the early morning hours, before breakfast, when the temperature is typically lower.
* Play outside in the evening after supper. We set up badminton for our visiting grandchildren. They loved playing it so much, we sent a badminton set to their home.
* In the dark, play flashlight tag.
* Spot fireflies. As a child, we did horrible things to the poor fireflies. Now, we just have fun spotting them. Count how many you see.

Children enjoy using their natural creativity that can be squashed playing electronic games. Help them find it and memories of this summer will be made.

Sunday, July 8, 2012

Tools to Build your Family

Recently, I posted my first video of my new video series, "Tools to Build your Family."

The first in the series is the key tool, "Be Consistent." Many of the moms and dads I've interviewed stated this was the wisdom they learned when their children were young.

I have so much to say! With all the research done in areas of behavior, time management, decision-making, etc. to help parents, it will be easy to make short videos of helpful advice.

The series will complement the 7 small books, only 59 pages each, I've written to reach today's parents and grandparents raising children.

So check it out, subscribe, sign on to Google to leave a comment. Let me know what you think. We all have wisdom to share to make parenting easier.

Saturday, May 19, 2012

School’s Out! Keep the routine.


Your child is excited to sleep in, swim at the pool, and play more video games. Within two weeks, he will be bored and whining. He is missing the structure of a routine and seeing his friends every day. As the parent, you get to set his schedule. Keep a bedtime. It can be a little later than school nights, but still needs to be set and followed. You don’t want a irritable child simply because he didn’t get enough sleep.

Have activities for your child to participate where he can be around children his own age. He can join a sports team, take swimming lessons, attend sports camp, participate in nature activities, and sign up for an art class. Many towns plan fun for school-age children at  local parks.

Teens will benefit from a summer job. The summer before my senior year, I slept in every day until 1 pm. At night, I would sit outside my parents’ house talking with my friends and drinking pop until the late hours. Philosophically, we solved most of the world’s problems. When I returned to the school routine, I felt I had wasted my summer.

Working at a job or volunteering in a prospective career area can be educational. For example, a future veterinarian can help at a local vet clinic. Bathing and scooping poop is not glamorous, but it is all part of the process. The same teen can volunteer at a local animal rescue organization. For several summers, I volunteered for the Red Cross and taught hundreds of children how to swim. It only lasted half of the summer, but gave me a reason to get up in the morning.

Work with your child to come up with ideas for him to enjoy his summer by being active. You will both benefit. Have a fun summer!