Via The 21st Century SAHM:How to Live A Good Life

Dear Kids,

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about who you will be when you’re older. There’s so much I want for you in this world, but I think that more than anything, I just want you to be good. Because people who are good, and who embody genuine kindness, are the happiest. And they help blot out the ugly and the cruel. So I’ve been thinking about what it means to live a good and true and genuine life. Here are my wishes for you.

I hope you’ll be the kind of person who waits patiently behind the 80-year-old woman using 52 coupons at the grocery store. I know you’ll be annoyed and in a rush. But she comes from a different time, a time when pennies were worth something. Sometimes I wish we lived then. Don’t sigh in irritation when she counts out change. Smile and wish her a good day.

I also hope you’ll be a good tipper and patient with people in training—in any profession. Your mother was a waitress long before you walked this Earth. I’ll tell you from experience—if you are waiting on your food, more than likely, it’s not your waitress’s fault. She’s probably facing 4-letter words being hurled at her from an overworked cook every time she returns to the kitchen. Just be patient. You’re not actually starving. Your mom was also a cashier. And a pizza flipper. And a dishwasher. And a myriad of other service positions. They all took training and the patience of people like you giving her a chance. Be kind and tip well.

I hope you never leave a hotel room trashed or neglect to throw away garbage because this is the job of cleaning staff and custodians. No. These are human beings, like you. And while they have a job to do for which they are paid, they deserve respect and dignity. Please pick up after yourself wherever you go in life.

On that same note, I hope you have jobs like these. Wash cars to make extra cash. Deliver pizzas. Babysit. Wait tables and wash dishes. That’s how you’ll know and appreciate all that these jobs entail.

I hope you have self-awareness. I did not really develop mine until adulthood, so I don’t expect much when you’re a kid. But at some point, I truly hope you realize that you came from a place of privilege. Your nation of birth, your skin color, and your socioeconomic status provided you a great deal of privileges and opportunities. Learn about what that means. Understand it. And do something good with it.

I hope you read, read, read. Learn about your world, its history, and its cultures. Get lost in a murder-mystery that you can’t put down. Read books that make you cry. And think. And feel inspired.

I hope you get to know people who are different from you—religiously, ethnically, racially, economically, politically. Listen to what they have to say.

Please do things that make you feel uncomfortable. Try weird foods. Go places that don’t have chain restaurants. Go somewhere where you have to learn a new language or culture. Get the hell out of your safe bubble or else your life will be suffocatingly boring.

I hope you take care of your body, because you only get one. Nourish it with good stuff. Eat apples and broccoli. But for the love of God, eat the cake and drink the wine too. Especially at parties, weddings, and on vacation.

Don’t be a martyr. Work hard, but neglecting yourself achieves nothing in the long run.

I hope you learn to fail. It might be the hardest thing you’ll ever have to do. You need to learn how to accept the gut punch of failure, grieve, be pissed, and then get back up and go again. No one—and I mean NO ONE who is successful has gotten there without failing along the way.

I hope you assert yourself. I want you to be respectful, but also stand up for yourself and for others. Nobody is allowed to put you down and make you feel lesser than.

However, if you were wrong, apologize. And mean it.

Let go of anger. It only hurts you. I am sad to say that you will be wronged and mistreated in your life. I hope you find a way to let it go and lift that burden off of your heart. It is far too heavy and will keep you from living a life of joy. The moment you forgive, you’ll feel love seep into the cracks and fill you up where the anger used to be.

I hope you’ll always have each other’s backs. There are three of you, so you’ll always have someone to call and to count on. Don’t forget that when you all grow up and move all over the country chasing your dreams.

And finally, I hope you don’t fight over who gets Mom and Dad when we are old and decrepit. There’s plenty of us to go around.

Love, Mom xo


These parents have been dealing with their kids’ attention issue, and they are here to share the tricks that actually helped them in keeping their kids focused.

Diana Jones, a mother of a 10-year-old with ADHD and auditory processing disorder shared that she gives her kid a very specific and clear task list, and let him take over the responsibilities there after.

Ian Grodman, the father of an 18-year-old with ADHD and dyslexia has also shared that it is necessary to give the kids frequent breaks.

Andrea Johnson, mother of a 13-year-old with reading, attention, memory and visual processing issue shared that she tries to get her kid involved in the process and allocate accountabilities to her kids.

Pamela Goldsteen, mother of a 10-year-old with dyslexia, dysgraphia and dyscalculia shared that it helps when her son’s school has homework built in as part of the behavior plan.

Watch this video now for more details and tips from their discussion!


Via Mommy Moment: Tips for Raising Content Kids

When parents are asked what their one wish for their children is, many respond with the fact that they want their children to be happy.

We all want to be raising content kids. Parents want happy children. From the moment they are born our kids’ happiness becomes a top priority. That doesn’t change as they grow, however it can seem to get more difficult to navigate how to ensure their happiness.

Remember that having happy kids does not mean giving children everything they want. It does not mean giving in when they whine and beg. It does not mean having them kids signed up for that dance class or hockey program. Many parents fall into the trap of saying yes to their children because they do not want them to feel bad. Kids, just like us, will have disappointments in life and it is not our job as parents to “fix” their disappointment.

Happiness is about parenting the individual child. Every child is different and will not necessarily respond to parenting the same way. The Happy Kid Handbook explores the differences among introverts, extroverts, and everything in between. This guide to parenting offers parents the strategies they need to meet their child exactly where he or she needs to be met.

Sometimes our child’s emotions can get overlooked. Parents tend to focus more on how their children are behaving, rather than how they are feeling. Maintaining an awareness of your child’s emotional state and keeping in mind that emotions play a big part in their wellbeing, can help parents become far more involved with their children and educate themselves on ways to raise a happy and content child.

Tips For Raising Content Kids

Ensure Your Happiness

Children can feed off our emotions. If we as parents are unhappy or not content in life, it is more likely that our children will feel that and mirror our feelings. Surround yourself with positive people, laugh often and take time for yourself to boost your mood. Chances are you will see a difference in your child’s emotional state as well.

Do Not Expect Perfection

Learn to expect effort over perfection. As long as your child is putting in the effort to do their best, that’s all that matters. Expecting perfection puts a lot of stress onto a child and therefore causes irritation and lower self-confidence when they don’t perform perfectly. No one is perfect. Make it very clear to your child that effort is important but that you don’t expect perfection.

Give Responsibilities

Giving your child responsibilities can help to increase their self-confidence and make them feel valued. Delegate responsibilities to your child that are age appropriate and within their capabilities. This will help to make them feel as though they are contributing something positive and in turn, increase their happiness.

Teach Gratitude

Take time daily to focus on what each member of your family is grateful for. If you all sit at the table together to enjoy dinner every night as a family, go around the table and express one thing you are grateful for each night. Doing this can help to foster a positive attitude, contentment, and happiness.

Your child’s happiness can depend on many different factors and it is important that we as parents don’t put too much pressure on them and focus on fostering a positive attitude. Your child will be much happier for it.


“Good job!” “Say sorry.” “Share.” “Do you want a time out?” Do these sound familiar to you? If so, you have probably picked up the “Parentspeak” without yourself even noticing it.

We might have started the “Parentspeak” with a good intention but little do we realise what it does to our kids.

According to Jennifer Lehr from WSJ, “Parentspeak” demands of compliance from kids rather than helping parents with their understanding on their kids’ feelings.

Check out this video now to find how you can speak to understand your kids’ feelings instead of giving them parents’ instructions to comply to!


It is challenging to teach kids how to tie shoe laces on their own.

If you need help, check this video now for some quick tips to teach your kids tie their shoes:
1. The bunny method which is the simplest to start off with.
2. The quick knot which require a little bit of practice but is super handy for kids once they master it
3. The practice board so that your kids can practice shoes tying anywhere they go
Did you think these tips are helpful? Comment below what other tips will you recommend now!

Don’t forget to share these tricks with your friends!


Travelling with a kid can be stressful. You will need tonnes of research and preparation before your trip to prepare for every single least expected detail. Yet, things could still find their way to go wrong despite your prep.

If you are taking a flight with your kids on your coming holiday, taking a car seat onto your flight would be able to help keep your kids as safe as possible on flight.

Watch this video now for all you need to know about bringing a car seat with you on an airplane.

Image credit to: Pixnio


Via The Parenting Place: A mum’s guide to an unstressy Christmas

In years gone by you would have found me madly rushing around buying presents, baking gingerbread, mulling wine, decking the halls, recreating endless stuff I’d found on Pinterest in an attempt to make Christmas magical for my kids. I would have been advent calendar-ing and Elf-on-the-Shelfing with the best of them. And my teeth would be nearly ground to nubs from the sheer effort of trying to drag my family kicking and screaming into ‘the Christmas spirit’ whether they liked it or not. Whether they complained or not. Whether it killed me or not.

But these days I take a different (less-is-more) approach. It’s the only way to keep my sanity and have any chance of enjoying this special season. We take each day as it comes, make few plans, watch loads of Christmas movies and try to just be in the moment.

Are you surviving the rush or wishing it was over already? Drowning in things to do or actually enjoying the season?

As I occasionally browse through Pinterest aimlessly pinning things I know I’ll never create, I wonder, “How’s everyone else doing out there?” Are you surviving the rush or wishing it was over already? Drowning in things to do or actually enjoying the season? Here’s how I’ve learned to survive (and even enjoy) Christmas, without too much stress.

1. Figure out what’s most important to you about Christmas (and then use that to reprioritise everything)

It sounds obvious, but sometimes we can get so caught up in the activity of the season that we forget to stop and think – what is this really all for?

  • Who are the people we most want to spend time with this season? (Make time for them)
  • What are the things we most enjoy doing as a family at this time of the year? (Make time for those)
  • Take stock, take a breath and ditch everything that doesn’t add to the enjoyment (i.e. the peace and joy) of Christmas.

A little word about obligations

Sometimes the biggest stress comes from being pulled in too many directions by various obligations. Some of these we can’t avoid, but others we can free ourselves from, like Christmas cards. Personally I don’t write them. I used to, but then decided I didn’t need the stress and freed myself from that one.

I refuse to stress myself out by loading myself down with obligations – I just do what I can and let the rest go.

Another thing I do to free myself from stress is limiting the number of people I buy gifts for to immediate family only, and thank you gifts for teachers. (The financial stress is big enough at Christmas without adding to it by trying to get a gift for every member of your son’s football team and all your great aunts).

Free yourself from obligations with a little word in the right ear, “The budget isn’t stretching to that this year, I’m sorry.” People understand. I refuse to stress myself out by loading myself down with obligations – I just do what I can and let the rest go.

2. Find a way to connect with the reason for the season

One of the biggest ways I stopped stressing and began actually enjoying the season was when I found a way to reconnect with the meaning of Christmas for me, i.e. the Christmas story. I keep that Christmas meaning alive and fresh in a number of other ways –

Christmas music

I download new Christmas songs each year from iTunes to help keep my Christmas music collection fresh. I have different playlists on iTunes and Spotify for each mood – moody Christmas carols for when I feel spiritual/sentimental, fun Christmas jingles for when it’s time to be merry.

Christmas shows

We look forward to our church Nativity play each year, and try to get along to a few other local events where we can meet friends, relax and hang out. We purposely avoid the crush and the rush at the major city wide events and stay local.

One of the biggest ways I stopped stressing and began actually enjoying the season was when I found a way to reconnect with the meaning of Christmas for me.

Christmas books

Reading favourite Christmas stories is a great way to connect with the season. We have a collection of Christmas books that we add to each year.

Christmas movies

We spend hours watching old favourites and discovering new ones. This time of year there are often Christmas films on TV and Netflix. There’s nothing better than snuggling up and watching a movie together, while munching on some Christmas treats.

Christmas giving

We always try to find a way to bless others at Christmas, whether it’s wrapping up a gift for needy families to put under a Wishing Tree, or getting the kids involved in Christmas kindness. Blessing others at this time of the year helps offset greed and commercialism and always leads to great warm fuzzies (giving is the real magic of Christmas).

3. Put a lid on greed

One of the most disheartening things about this season is the way it can turn our kids into greedy spoilt brats if we’re not careful. Focusing on giving to others as a family is one of the best ways to offset this.

Something you want, something you need, something to wear, something to read.

Another way is to put limits on the Christmas spending spree by setting expectations early. Most years we follow this rule for Christmas gifts, “Something you want, something you need, something to wear, something to read.” The kids end up saying, “Mum, for my something to read I’d really love the latest Wimpy Kid book,” or, “Mum for my ‘something I need’, I really need a lunchbox, and socks – ’cause my brothers keep stealing mine!” This not only helps me focus on what to buy but lets the kids know not to expect a massive pile of loot under the tree. It also helps reduce financial pressure.

4. Don’t reinvent the wheel – take shortcuts

It is possible to have Christmas fun without all the stress. If you aren’t the type who enjoys baking, why tear your hair out over a made-from-scratch gingerbread house that won’t stick together? Get a cheap ready-made kit from Kmart instead and let the kids have fun lathering it in lollies. Use store-bought custard and sponge cake for the Christmas trifle, put cream on a Cowells pavlova, heat up an Aunt Betty’s Christmas pudding in the microwave. Don’t feel like you have to make/bake everything from scratch – give yourself a break and find a shortcut.

Don’t feel like you have to make/bake everything from scratch – give yourself a break and find a shortcut.

Here’s a tip that will save your Christmas Eve – wrap the presents as you buy them. Don’t wait until Christmas Eve to wrap them all at in one hit. This is a thankless back-breaking exercise which is sure to keep you up late wondering why you bought so much stuff. Wrap-as-you-go lets you just chill and enjoy Christmas Eve, when not a creature is stirring, just you with a glass of wine, (store-bought) Christmas mince tarts and candlelight.

5. Don’t compare

Whatever you do, don’t compare your Christmas efforts to others’. Fill your house with Christmas in your own way. The danger of social media is that we can start to compare our efforts to the picture-perfect awesomeness we see in our newsfeeds. Down this road of comparison lies discontent and dissatisfaction. Don’t go there.

Down this road of comparison lies discontent and dissatisfaction. Don’t go there.

Look for inspiration on the net, by all means, but don’t let it make you feel like your Christmas efforts are not ‘enough’. Instead fill your house with your own sense of the season: your special memories and things that mean Christmas to you. For us it’s decorating a real pine tree (for that instant Christmassy smell) with the decorations we’ve collected through the years and lighting candles and twinkle lights at night. On Christmas Eve we hang stockings, watch a Christmas movie and eat our store-bought, lolly-lathered gingerbread house.You do you.

If your Christmas to-do list is too long and you’re lying awake at night wondering how you’re going to do it all, it may be time to edit that list. So what if we’ve ticked off doing all the Christmas activities and traditions from our list but we’ve exhausted ourselves in the process and can’t wait until the whole jolly rigmarole is over? Sometimes less is more.


As parents, we all think that our own kids are special, amazing and perfect in every single way. We care about their intelligence and development.

According to a study by the Institute of Psychiatry at King’s College London, published today in Psychological Science, our drawing abilities are correlated to our intelligence. Meaning despite that being good at drawings, it could be an indication of their high intelligence!

The logic is that if your kids are putting extra details in their drawings, it could indicate their higher level of cognitive ability which is associated with high intelligence.

So, the next time when your kids brought their drawings home, remember to check them out properly! You might have discovered a genius of your own!


What is your parenting philosophy? If it is about raising a happy child, you might want to reconsider it after watching this video.

Dr. Shefali shared a surprising parenting myth: which is “parenting is about raising a happy child”.

Dr. Shefali said that life is not just about happiness. Life is to experience in every nuance as it presents itself in them as is.

As parents, it is our sacred obligation to not teach our children to run away from life as it is. Therefore, it is inevitable to teach rejection to our kids.

Do you agree? Comment your thoughts below now!


Teaching kids about money are one of the most important responsibilities of parents.

Have you ever come across your kids asking you “Are we rich?”. How would you respond to their question?

It does not make sense to lie to your kids about money. Sooner or later, they will find out the right answer.

If you are not sure about how should you answer to your kids and how would your responses affect them, check out this video now on how to talk to your kids about money!

Next time when your kids ask this tricky question, tweak it into a lesson of gratitude instead!