A Family That Resolves Together… Reads Together, Plays Together

FamilyResolutions: Families that Play TogetherI woke up this morning as one little hand made its way across the top of my chest…seeking….slowly…stopping only as it honed in on the beating of my heart.  A warm body attached to that pint-sized arm snuggled up against my right side. To my left, a muffled, “I love my mommy…”,  sighed from another small person.

And in a flash, my New Year’s resolution to force these two babies of mine to stay in their own beds and let me sleep in peace dissolved into nothingness. In the dark, I felt more than I could see, his small hand opening and closing as it kept time with my heart.  I could only imagine he must have done the same as he slept within before he was born.  His blond hair tucked beneath my chin, I could smell his wanna-be boy, but all-baby to me.  I tilt my head towards my girl as she stirs, tossing her leg over mine, already fighting the alarm clock that has yet to ring, ‘nuggle, Mommy, nuggle…’ burrowing down in to me for comfort.

This is officially the only type of January morning I love.

Today, I resolve: I will let them stay babies – my babies – as long as they wish.  And together, we will make resolutions as a family.  We will resolve TO DO instead of resolving to STOP….

Here are the results of our family resolutions.

What about you and your family?  Have you set any resolutions together?

Here is our recap:

*Institute a monthly family game night

*Create a Family International Night – Dinner and fun to learn about different cultures

*Make a family effort to be more Organized and Tidy

*DEAR time – Drop Everything And Read

** and the one STOP – Small people want to try to stop fighting

We will follow up with these resolutions next month to see how we are doing… in the mean time – SHARE… what do you do to Play and Stay together?

I am proud to say I am working with Kelloggs for the year and they have encouraged me, as they do with breakfast and meal time, to slow down and spend quality time with my family.  This post is sponsored by them, though, as always, all thoughts and opinions are strictly my own.

 

From Seed to Spoon: Serving My Small People the Same Cereals I had as a Child

I had this funny little moment a few weeks ago.  I consider myself a fairly smart girl, but sometimes, things just have a way of sneaking up on me.  As a child, Rice Krispies were a staple in my home.  My mom served them before we went to school most days – it was one of the few cereals she allowed since it fell into the healthier category.

But even more exciting than that, every time my grandmother would visit, she would bring this remarkable batch of Rice Krispie treats with her.  Now, my Grammy came to visit twice a year – once at Christmas (she stayed for a month) and once over the Summer (and she would stay for three months).  The very second she arrived, she would pull out the treats and hand me one. No one has ever been able to make them as well as my sweet Grammy.

No one.

(Side note: Grammy turns 100 – YES – 100 in February, but has Alzheimers, so she doesn’t remember how to make them anymore, so I may never have any quite so delicious – but the memory is divine!)

Full confession: as a young child, I told my little brother Rice Krispie treats were made with used chewing gum so he wouldn’t eat them.  I wanted them all for myself.  He believed me at first, and still, to this day, holds the lie against me.  I will live.  For a few weeks, there were more magical Rice Krispie treats for me.

Now, are you ready to be amazed?  Try not to laugh (because MAYBE it was just me – and my husband, because he didn’t know either) as I JUST learned this while on a call with Kellogg’s and seeing this Simple Grains Rice video:

Rice Krispies are really just PUFFED GRAINS OF RICE.

photo courtesy: kelloggs.com/simplegrains

What?  Ok… admittedly, you could be a) laughing at me or b) rolling your eyes at my complete *innocence*.  More than anything, as I watched the video about how the rice goes from being farmed to ending up in the bowl on our kitchen tables, I loved knowing that this cereal, the one I ate as a child, is still being made now as it was then.  The same simple process – from ‘seed to spoon’ is used for wheat and corn.

Kellogg’s new Simple Grains campaign explains how the company has made it a priority to keep so many of their cereals ‘simple’ – starting with a farm and a single grain: wheat, corn and rice.  And they’ve been doing it for more than 100 years.  Raisin Bran, Corn Flakes and Rice Krispies are three of the cereals that start like this and they are three that my mom used to buy for us when we were little.

They are now three I have been serving to my small people before they head out the door for school. Simple.

I do have a working relationship with Kellogg’s.  As always, all opinions and writing on this site are my own. 

 

 

How The Olympic Athletes Are Inspiring Me To Be A Better Example For My Children

I think this whole parenting thing may have been easier when my small people were small.  I mean really small.  Small enough to miss the moments when I’m practicing ‘do as I say and not as I do’. Like when I tell them to eat their vegetables and then I pass mine off to the dog.  What?  You’ve never done that?  *sigh*

Or sending them outside to get their exercise while I found myself too busy to fit it in?

Or standing over them, encouraging breakfast, ‘the most important meal of the day’, while I skip it myself.

I’ve had a few epiphanies about this lately.  Some have come in conversation with friends.  And some?  Right from the mouths of the very people I’m trying to raise.

I’ve always known my children watch what I do.  I’ve witnessed my daughter wrap her hair in a towel as I do after a shower, my son use his hands to get his point across in conversation, both of them hold doors open for strangers, request to write blog posts, bury their noses in books, pose automatically for an iPhone picture and occasionally use the word ‘um’?  (I have to accept the good and the bad, right?)

But somehow, I had, until recently, convinced myself, that my ‘bad habits’ wouldn’t have a lasting effect.  I was visiting the U.S Olympic Training Facility in Chula Vista, California with Kellogg’s and a group of fellow bloggers.  During a roundtable discussion about family eating habits, one of the bloggers was talking about her teen children.  And it hit me… I have future teenagers.

I know, I know… maybe not a shock to you, but to me?  Cooper and Delaney are about to turn 6 and 8 and quite honestly, I can’t picture them any older than they are now.  In fact, I’m not sure where the last 8 years have gone….

Delaney is now halfway to driving.  *shudder*  And sadly, while I may be a good mother to her in many ways, I am not setting her up with the best eating habits to start her day…not because I don’t provide healthy foods, but because I am not the example she needs.

So, I’ve come up with a few changes I need to make.

Change #1 – Start eating breakfast

Now, I wouldn’t classify me as ‘unhealthy’, per se.  I’m not overweight, and my diet does include fruits and vegetables.  But I don’t get enough exercise.  There is nothing like spending time with an Olympic athlete – in this case – Javelin hopeful – Kara Patterson – to recognize just how well she cares for her body and what a poor job I am doing in comparison.  Don’t get me wrong, I’m not trying out for the Olympics – for her this is a full time job…. but being a mom and an example of health to my children is certainly important to me.

So – later that day, I was given the opportunity to try my hand at a sport I had never before attempted.  Under the guidance of Olympic Archery hopefuls like Jake Kaminski, I found that I LOVED the sport.  Ignore my Hunger-Games-Katniss-getup.  Clearly, I didn’t dress for the occasion.  After failing miserably at my first arrow, my ‘coach’ said I was ‘right eye’ dominant and told me to close my left eye for my remaining shots.  Success.  I’m no threat to the U.S. Olympic team, but I had fun.

Change #2 – Exercise is Crucial – try a new sport

My children are wickedly athletic.  They come by it honestly – from their dad’s side of the family.  They play it all – baseball, softball, soccer, basketball….even horseback riding.  And they do it well.  I was injured playing anything and everything as a child.  Broken bones, knocked out teeth.  I’m not kidding.  The only sport I ‘played’ successfully in my youth was swimming.  But my kids think ‘swimming’ and ‘sports’ are two different categories.  In fact, my small girl wanted to get me a baseball glove for Mother’s Day so she ‘could teach me’ how to play.

My children are yearning for my participation in the things they love.  And that means sports.

Do As I Do.

Change #3 – Prove That Swimming IS a Sport.  AND?  Learn to play catch.

I want my small people to remember an active mother.  I want them to know I am capable.  And, I want to introduce them to something amazing.

We’ll see how I do.

Those Olympic Games are pretty powerful, now aren’t they?

I’m grateful to Kelloggs for the opportunity to visit the Olympic Training Center in Chula Vista. (and for the inspiration to be a better mother) I am delighted to be working with them.