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Archive for January, 2010

Rag Quilt

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

I finally finished our rag quilt, it’s been in the works for a year or more. Last year for Christmas I made rag quilts for both sets of parents and my sisters. I wanted one for our bed too, but personal projects always get pushed aside in my life.

This quilt has been a work in progress for months. Rag quilts are easy to do in spurts: first I designed it on my laptop; months later I cut out all of the pieces; later I quilted them together; then I sewed the rows together; finally I ragged it and washed it. It literally took me months to complete, but each section took less than a week individually.

My rag quilts are the first big sewing projects I’ve ever completed. Before I made quilts last year, the only other sewing project I’d done were my first attempts at cloth wipes. I really am not an expert seamstress by any stretch of the imagination. I’ve had several friends ohh and ahh over the quilts and wish longingly for the skills to make one of their own. I am here to tell you: it can be done!

When I started last year, all I had were these two tutorials and the online advice of a few sewing friends:

1) This is my favorite tutorial – I love, love, love the quilt pictured at the bottom of the tutorial. I looked for hours for flannel to do something like that (with the rainbow of colors), but my local craft stores didn’t carry anything good enough and I couldn’t afford the expensive stuff online. Next time . . .

2) This tutorial doesn’t have pictures like the one above, but it is quite clear and helpful.

Here are a few pictures of what I’ve done.

In the first tutorial, the author mentions taking pictures of your colors and mapping out a design on the computer. I did that for all of my quilts because I was making such big ones. All of my fabric squares were 9 x 9 inches (the 3rd inner layer was 8 x 8). For my family’s quilts, I did 10 squares by 10 squares, so the finished quilts were 80 x 80 inches. They fit queen sized beds nicely.

Anyway, the picture above is the design I made on my computer for my parents’ quilt. I took pictures of all of the fabric (some of it I tweaked color to make it easier to recognize while designing, like that yellow) and played with different patterns. The notes on the side there are to help me match up the front and back sides – without a guide I would have spaced out and messed up my design.

And here is that quilt finished. Isn’t Kieran a cute little thing? He was just a year old in this picture! (sniff)

This is the back of mom’s quilt. Let me tell you how super excited she was that I used flannel from one of her sheet sets, so she actually has matching pillow cases.

And here is the quilt I just put on our bed! I love so many things about this quilt. My favorite part is that I saved fabric from every other quilt I made, so the back of our quilt is a mishmash of all of the other fabric. It makes me feel connected to the family that I made quilts for – that might seem a little corny, but it’s true.

Because we just got a new king sized bed, I made our quilt 12 by 12 squares, or 110 x 110 inches. I didn’t know that we were going to have a Cal king, or I would have made it a little bit wider. It works fine though!

If you are a beginner sewer, this is an excellent project to try. Like the second tutorial says, normally rag quilts are made much smaller – people often use them as lap quilts. If you have any questions, I’d be happy to answer them (or research and then answer!).

What was your first sewing project? Link to pictures – I need new inspiration!

On Code Name: Mama, I share information, resources, and my thoughts on natural parenting and life with a toddler. Please take a moment to subscribe to my RSS feed for free updates.

Posted in My Crafts & Projects | 16 Comments »

Embrace Life

Saturday, January 30th, 2010

This commercial made me misty. Thank you Steve Hall for posting it!


Find more videos like this on AdGabber

Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments »

Two New Guest Posts

Saturday, January 30th, 2010

I forgot to mention that I’ve had two new guest posts go up on other sites this week, please take a minute to check both the posts and the other sites out.

The first article is the second in a series on why we chose cloth. It’s over on Go Green Street. Here is a snippet:

Superabsorbent diapers contain another controversial chemical: sodium polyacrylate. Sodium polyacrylate is a powder inserted into the inner compartment of disposable diapers. It is the substance that allows disposable diapers to hold up to 7 lbs of liquid; it is also the “substance that was removed from tampons in 1985 because of its link to toxic shock syndrome.” When the sodium polyacrylate powder is wet, it turns into a gel. If you have ever seen gel-like crystals oozing out of a wet disposable diaper, you’ve seen sodium polyacrylate.

There have been no studies performed to determine what the long-term effects are of having this chemical in constant contact with babies’ reproductive organs. We do know, however, that in the short term it can cause allergic reactions, severe skin irritations, oozing blood from the perineum and scrotum, fever, vomiting, and staph infections. Sodium polyacrylate has killed children who ingested as little as five grams of the chemical, and it causes health issues in the workers who manufacture it.

The second article is on API Speaks, and is entitled “Modeling API Values.” It is full of pictures of my favorite person, which makes it worth a perusal. Here is a snippet:

Looking through some recent pictures of my son (Kieran), I realized that we (as parents who share these values) might be doing more just by modeling these concepts to our children. Of course I will continue to extol the value of full-term breastfeeding, and I will defend every mother’s right to nurse in public when, where and how she wants to. But I take immense comfort in the fact that my son might not need to fight these same battles because we are normalizing it for his generation, simply by living.

If you are looking for someone to guest post, let me know!

On Code Name: Mama, I share information, resources, and my thoughts on natural parenting and life with a toddler. Please take a moment to subscribe to my RSS feed for free updates.

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Posted in API Speaks, My Guest Posts Elsewhere | 2 Comments »

More Thoughts on Tantrums

Friday, January 29th, 2010

I want to expand a little on Wednesday’s post about tantrums. I’d like to explain a little more why I don’t believe punishing a tantrum is effective.

What Is Our Ultimate Goal?

When addressing the question of “how to deal with tantrums,” I think it is important to ask ourselves what we are trying to accomplish. What is our ultimate goal?

If our goal is to teach children that the parent is in control, that children are expected to act and behave specific ways, that children must submit to the will of the parent at all costs, and that if they “misbehave” they will be punished, then I suppose discipline might get compliance.

I just don’t believe that bullying a child – through threat or force – has any other effect than making a child comply out of fear and reluctance. You aren’t making them want to do the right thing, you’re making them want to avoid the wrong thing. Same thing goes for taking away a favorite toy or activity as a consequence for having a tantrum. What does that teach other than the fact that you have control, and that some random bad thing might happen if he “misbehaves.” That teaches him nothing about the correct way to act, it just makes him resentful and fearful. Punitive measures don’t make kids want to “behave,” they just make them want to not get caught “misbehaving.” Make sense?

We do not want Kieran to fear us.

We do not want Kieran to view us as people who can wield loving or hurtful hands at our whim.

We are not trying to force compliance.

What Is the Benefit of Discipline During a Tantrum?

In a comment I made on Wednesday’s post, I gave this (fake) example: Kieran wants to paint, but because we’re going to leave in 10 minutes, I don’t have time to pull out the paints and then clean up the inevitable mess. Kieran screams and cries and throws a piece of bread that he’d been eating.

What good would “discipline” do in that moment? I mean discipline in the traditional sense: spanking, yelling, putting Kieran in timeout, etc.

Here’s what I would do:

I would get down on Kieran’s level and affirm what he is feeling:
“You are mad because you want to paint and we don’t have time.”
Usually, Kieran agrees with me.
“You wish we could paint, and you are upset that we have to leave in a few minutes.”
Yep.
“I understand that you would like to paint now, but right now is not a good time for us. How about we paint later this evening when we get home?”

Usually, this calms him down – we’ve compromised. Now how to deal with the bread? I will ask him to pick it up. Sometimes he does, sometimes he doesn’t. If he doesn’t, I might say “ok, mama will get it, but next time it would really help me if you either didn’t throw it, or you picked it up.”
(Alternatively, I might leave it, he’ll pick it up in a little bit. That’s not always possible, but sometimes it is and I can thank him later for taking care of the mess.)

In the aftermath of intense emotions, it’s not worth the power struggle to force Kieran to pick up what he’s messed up in the throes of a tantrum.
And even later, we might talk about how it isn’t always appropriate to throw things when we are angry – but we talk about it AFTER everyone has calmed down.

But if we don’t “punish” him for throwing the bread, won’t he just continue to throw things when angry? What if next time he throws something bigger and breaks a window?

I’ll answer that with another question: what does spanking a child teach him about “next time”? What does putting a child in his room teach him about how to handle his anger?

We want to teach Kieran that throwing things might be dangerous, and that while he might get angry and *feel like* throwing, there is a more appropriate way to show his anger. (On that note, there are actually times it is *ok* to throw things. We’ll work on that too.) I don’t care if he yells or screams – sometimes I yell and scream when I get mad too. I hope that I can teach Kieran that his anger is an ok thing to feel, but that he needs to channel it appropriately. That’s why we discuss things later. By discussing it, Kieran will learn that throwing things is not appropriate. That way, our windows will stay intact.

Parent-Control Does Not Magically Turn Into Self-Control

Here’s another example I gave in a comment on Wednesday’s post (this one really happened): We were at Toys R Us to get Kieran a new train for his train tracks. Toys R Us has a display train that kids can play with. Kieran played with the trains while I looked at what we were going to buy. When it was time to go, Kieran did not want to put the display trains back – he clung to them and said “NeeNee trains! Take home!” Well, that obviously wasn’t going to happen.

I could have ripped the trains from his hands, which would have resulted in a meltdown and made an unpleasant ending to what had been an enjoyable outing.

Instead, I talked about why the store needed the trains (for other kids to play with), I let him know that they’d be there the next time we visited, and I pointed out that we had a train of our own to buy and take home. Initially, he still didn’t want to give them up. So I planted myself next to the train table and let him play for a few more minutes. In 3-4 minutes, Kieran put one train on the table (he had two) and said “NeeNee put one back.” I said “Yep! Thank you, when you’re ready to put the other one down too, we’ll go.” He played for one more minute and finally put the other train down. He was ready.

I let him have some choice in how the trains were going to get put down. He needed time to process the fact that he really liked those trains, but we couldn’t take them home. I think a lot of tantrums/meltdowns happen because the adult forgets that toddlers don’t have our reasoning ability. They don’t process as quickly, they don’t understand why we ask the things we ask, etc. It is our job to teach them *why*, not punish them when they don’t conform to our will.

But wasn’t allowing him to play for those 5 minutes “giving in to him,” you might ask?

Well, if you want to be in control of your child at all times, then maybe. But why does it need to be about who is in control, who is giving in, who is getting whose way?

We don’t need to have control over Kieran’s every move.

A friend made a great point the other day – she said that when we try to control another person’s actions, we are actually giving that person control over us. All the person has to do is ignore our will, and that opens the door for us to get upset, angry, etc.

Parenting does not have to be a control game.

Kieran knows we are the parents, he listens to us all the time. If control were an issue, we have plenty of it. But what does it take away from us to take his feelings into consideration? Nothing.

What did that 5 minutes take away from my life? If I had grabbed the trains, he would have had a 5 minute meltdown that would have turned into an hour long pout fest. The entire tone of our evening would have been tinged by tears and frustration. What would that gain me? Nothing.

Letting him play for 5 minutes let him know that I respected his wishes too. He is a person. I value him.

Our Goal Is to Have a Relationship with Our Child Based on Respect, Love, and Trust

One last example (this also really happened):

Kieran took some water into the living room last week and set it on the floor. Tom said “Kieran, please put that up on the table so it doesn’t get knocked over.” Fast forward 30 minutes – the water was still on the floor and Kieran knocked it over.

What would happen in the house of parents who punish their child for messing up? Would the child hide the fact that he spilled? Would he hide himself? Would he shamefully avoid the fact that the glass had spilled, just like he had been warned? Would he be scared that he would be punished – sent to time out, spanked, have a toy taken away?

Do you know what happened in our house? Kieran walked in and cheerfully said “mama! NeeNee spill water!” I said, “thank you for telling me, let’s clean it up!”

And then we went in together, got a towel, and he helped by stepping on the towel. And then we got more water and I helped him put it on the table.

No anger.

No harsh words.

No discipline.

We worked together, because we all mess up.

Tom and I choose to parent in the way we would want to be treated. I don’t want Tom to express his displeasure with me by striking me or sending me away from him, I want to have a conversation with him and come to a mutual understanding. Why should we treat our child as if he deserves less?

________________________________________________

Do you feel that there is ever a time to punish tantrums?

What do you think punishment teaches children?

On Code Name: Mama, I share information, resources, and my thoughts on natural parenting and life with a toddler. Please take a moment to subscribe to my RSS feed for free updates.

Posted in Discipline, Kieran, Parenting, Toddlerhood | 23 Comments »

Toddler Activity Schedule 3 (Children’s Books)

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

The first week of February is “Children’s Authors & Illustrators Week,” so we are going to focus on books and storytelling.

Monday

Morning
Monday Fun-day with Jax & Sarah
*I am hosting this week. We will have pictures cut out and will help the boys tell stories using the pictures. They can glue the pictures onto a paper to make a book of their stories.

Afternoon
Pretend play
*I’ll give Kieran some options: 1) Play “artist”: draw pictures on an easel; or 2) “Brown Bear, Brown Bear” game: we will get out his stuffed animals and put them around the room. I will say “Kieran, Kieran, what do you see?” And he will pick an animal and describe it: “I see an orange monster looking at me!” Then we can switch and he will say “mama, mama what do you see?”, etc.

3:00-4:00 – outside
4:00-5:00 – Music & Movement (I have a “Move ‘n Groove Kids” DVD on hold at the library.)

Tuesday

Morning
Fun with numbers
*We will make a book of numbers. Using notebook or construction paper, fold paper in half (into a book shape) or use a 3 hole punch and tie yarn through the holes to create a binding. On each page I will write a number (from 1 – 20), and we will put a matching number of stickers on each page (so 4 stickers on the page that says “4″).

Afternoon

Language/pre-reading
*I will record (either by writing or videotaping) some stories as Kieran tells them. I will help him with story ideas by providing props & encouragement.

3:00-4:00 – outside
4:00-5:00 – Music & Movement

Wednesday

Morning
See the city field trip day!
*Lakeside Nature Center

Afternoon
Exploring our World
*Where Do They Live? sorting game: Gather toy figures or pictures of jungle animals and ocean animals. Get two baskets and go through each animal asking your child “does this animal live in the jungle or the ocean?” Let your child sort several animals into two groups. After your child gets a sense of what the game is, step back and let him do some alone. If he doesn’t sort them “correctly” or at all, that’s ok – just let him play!

3:00-4:00 – outside
4:00-5:00 – Music & Movement

Thursday

Morning
Science Adventures
*Eye Dropper Painting: Mix water with a few drops of food coloring. Show your child how to use an eye dropper to pick up the water and drop it on paper. Talk about the different colors, and make sure to display the artwork after it’s done.

Afternoon
Library & grocery store

*I have a holds on two award winning books:
*”The Hello, Goodbye Window“: a Caldecott Medal winner about the magical window at a little girl’s grandparents’ house; and
*”Don’t Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus“: a Caldecott Honor book written and illustrated by Mo Willems, who used to work for Sesame Street.

The Caldecott Medal is awarded to the artist of the most distinguished American picture book for children published that year.

For lists of Caldecott Medal and Honor books by year, see this link.

3:00-4:00 – outside
4:00-5:00 – Music & Movement

Friday

Morning
Kid Swapping with Melody

Afternoon
Messy Play
*We’ll do a pouring activity using rice, a scooper, and different size bowls.

3:00-4:00 – outside
4:00-5:00 – Music & Movement

Would you and your child benefit from a weekly activity schedule? I’d love to share with you! Please take a moment to subscribe to my RSS feed for free updates.

Posted in Activities for Toddlers, Arts & Crafts, Creative/Dramatic Play, Educational, Fun & Games, Music, Toddler Activity Schedule | 5 Comments »