• Jeena@piefed.jeena.net
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    5 months ago

    I’m a big white guy living in Korea. I’ve been walking daily the same route about 9 km to get our daughter from school and bring her to afterschool.

    Normally I have her little brother in a strawler with me but he nowadays is in a dayvare at that time and I’m getting him afterwards.

    Today close to the school a older woman started talking to me and asking me where I left the cute baby I normally have with me, if he is asleep or something. I’ve never seen her before but she seems to have seen me many times walking there with the strawler.

    Like they say: “The monkey knows no one, but everyone knows the monkey.”

  • czardestructo@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Took a 6 day vacation with the wife and our only child, a five year old. Long story short, we learned vacationing with an only child is a lot of work and next time to bring her a friend or cousins to occupy her attention so that responsibility isn’t on a parent. Still learning how to vacation!

  • bighatchester@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    My daughter was born last week and get released from the hospital Saturday. Really amazing having her home and things are going very well . My 6 year old son will get to see her soon since he is xurr with his mom , really exciting times !

  • webghost0101@sopuli.xyz
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    5 months ago

    Sometimes your kid is doing something you feel like you should correct. Ask yourself this question.

    “Is or may this behavior cause actual harm to themselves or anyone else?”

    If the answer is no ask yourself:

    “Are you already exhausted?”

    Energy is a limited resource, even more so for a parent. You have are responsible for your child well being. That means in a time of actual crisis you need the energy to make the right decisions.

    Sometimes (definitely not always) Learn to converse your energy by looking the other way if they are not causing actual problem.

    Examples are Playing with food, coloring on papers there not supposed to color on but you didn’t still need and some forms of tantrums.

  • TORFdot0@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    In this exhausting phase with one of my 4 year olds where he won’t sit down to eat his supper. Every evening meal is a battle where he refuses to eat for a half hour before he finishes half his plate and can get up finally an hour later

    • Oneser@lemm.ee
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      5 months ago

      We had this at one point too. Turns out they weren’t hungry, so we changed such that the food is there but they choose whether they want to eat. Instead of eating they could bring a piece of paper and do drawing or tell us about their day for a bit while we sit together.

      It worked well as it was a lot calmer and the transition to bed wasn’t as big an hour or so later.

      Not saying it will work for you, but it helped us.

  • theinfamousj@parenti.sh
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    5 months ago

    I gave away my entire freezer stash to a new mom whose milk was medically delayed. End of an era. The Chestburster is still nursing, but old enough now that solids and water can hold him should we be apart for any length of time.

    (I take him to work with me, so I’m basically around him 24/7 in the normal course of our life.)

    Oh yeah, lessons. Um … It is developmentally normal at around 10 months for a nursing kiddo, especially one who is used to straw cups (which they should be, for oralmotor development), to go a bit chompy chompy on the nipple. Especially the left nipple. This constitutes an income stream for IBCLCs. Just have them latch by dragging the nipple down from the kid’s nose to their mouth. This forces them to stick out their tongue to cover the bottom teeth and the top teeth will be at an angle which makes nipple damage challenging - not impossible, but challenging. The problem is “nipple confusion” of a sort. Their world schema only has “I get liquid out of this thing” and they’ve learned straw technique and are applying it to nipple. Within a week or two of forcing a correct latch on them, their world schema changes to “this is a nipple and that is a straw”. And now you don’t have to pay for an IBCLC visit!