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Disney on Ice Ticket Giveaway

Let’s call this “Treat Tuesday” because it’s been quite a long time since I’ve done a give-away on my site. Here’s the details, Disney on Ice Let’s Celebrate! is coming to Fairfax’s Patriot Center October 23-27 and today I’m giving away four tickets to

Don't miss Disney on Ice!

Don’t miss Disney on Ice!

the opening night show on Wednesday October 23 at 7pm. We typically make the trek to Virginia on a busy weekday night every fall to see this show because my girls love it that much. If you’ve not been to a Disney on Ice! show yet or wondered if the ticket prices are worth it, here’s my review from last October and my review from the show at the Verizon Center last February.   Bottom line: it’s Disney, it’s going to be fabulous. It’s the swag in the hallways surrounding the arena that becomes the end of me because the children inevitably want you to spend your hard earned cash on every beautiful sparkly, glowing, light up, costume, doll, balloon, you name it, they want it. My approach is to warn them before we even open the arena doors that their one and only present is GOING to the show. The end.

Here are the details on this show from the show organizers:

Make an ordinary day extraordinary by joining  Disney On Ice presents Let’s Celebrate! More than 50 of your favorite Disney characters will visit the Patriot Center for one colossal party on ice! The memorable show for all ages will be at the Patriot Center in Fairfax, Va. from October 23-27.

Let’s Celebrate is an action-packed show featuring a magical montage of celebrations and is a mix of contemporary music with

A scene from the finale of this  year's show

A scene from the finale of this year’s show

your favorite Disney tunes. Join Mickey Mouse and Minnie Mouse as they celebrate a Very Merry Unbirthday Party with Alice and the Mad Hatter; Mardi Gras with Princess Tiana and Prince Naveen; a Royal Valentine’s Day Ball with the Disney Princesses; and a Halloween haunt alongside Disney’s most famous Villains in this celebration of the century.

Show Times:
Wednesday, October 23rd @ 7:00 p.m.
Thursday, October 24th @ 7:00 p.m.
Friday, October 25th @ 10:30 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, October 26th @ 10:30 a.m. 2:30 p.m. and 6:30 p.m.
Sunday, October 27th @ 12:30 p.m. and 4:30 p.m.

Venue/Ticket Information:
Tickets are on-sale now and can be purchased at all Ticketmaster outlets via charge by phone at 1-800-745-3000; via www.ticketmaster.com <http://www.ticketmaster.com> ; and at the Patriot Center box office.

Patriot Center Ticket Prices: $75.00 (Front Row) / $50.00 (VIP) / $30.00 / $20.00
To discover more about Disney On Ice, go to www.disneyonice.com

If you do not win my give-away but want to save $6 on your tickets, use offer code PRINT when purchasing online to receive this discount.

So how do you enter to win? It’s easy, naturally you’ve already hit “Like” on the Wired Momma Facebook page. Just comment under my Facebook post that you want to be entered in the give-away. I will have one of the Wired Momma’ettes randomly draw the winner’s name on Friday October 11 and I will announce that winner’s name on Facebook – so be sure you CHECK BACK. Again, this is for four tickets to see the show at the Patriot Center at 7pm on Wednesday October 23.  If I don’t hear from the winner by Monday October 14, I will draw another name, just to be fair.

May the odds be ever in your favor……..

 

Fun with Good Night Moon

Me and the little Wired Momma’ettes recently hit Adventure Theatre MTC for their final dress rehearsal of Good Night Moon. I must confess, going into it, I wondered if the show would be a little young for my second grader. I also wondered how in the world they could turn an extremely simple, though sweet, baby book into an engaging 60 minute production.

The lovely set of Adventure Theatre MTC's Good Night Moon. Actors: Sam Edgerly and Colin Cech. Photo Credit: Mike Horan

The lovely set of Adventure Theatre MTC’s Good Night Moon. Actors: Sam Edgerly and Colin Cech. Photo Credit: Mike Horan

Why do I doubt?

Why do I have reservations?

Why am I suspicious?

Shouldn’t I know better, by now, considering we almost never have missed a show at Adventure Theatre MTC in years, lots and lots of years?

I guess I can’t help it. I’m super annoying like that. Plus, while I’m piling on the confessions, I mine as well continue – despite the risk that people might start rioting in front of my house after I admit this one, but frankly I never really loved the Good Night Moon book. I know. I know.

BLASPHEMY

I am basically a traitor. But still, c’est vrai. When my girls were babies, I’d rather cuddle up with a Sandra Boynton book or Brown Bear, Brown Bear, than Good Night Moon. I found it redundant and slow. I know – the perfect speed for a baby but I was the one reading. And I was always tired. And probably cranky.

There you have it. Some serious confessions. Now that my conscious is clear I can tell you that I seriously loved the musical

Note our fav Tooth Fairy is in the background. Actors: Colin Cech, Sam Edgerly, Dorea Schmidt, and Maya Brettell. Photo Credit: Mike Horan

Note our fav Tooth Fairy is in the background. Actors: Colin Cech, Sam Edgerly, Dorea Schmidt, and Maya Brettell. Photo Credit: Mike Horan

The dish, the spoon, the Cat and the Fiddle. Loved those costumes. Actors: Maya Brettell, Dorea Schmidt, Sam Edgerly, and Colin Cech. Photo Credit: Mike Horan

The dish, the spoon, the Cat and the Fiddle. Loved those costumes. Actors: Maya Brettell, Dorea Schmidt, Sam Edgerly, and Colin Cech. Photo Credit: Mike Horan

production. It was lively, witty, entertaining and wove in many other children’s classic stories.  Like a beloved Pixar movie, the Adventure Theatre MTC production team built in humor and entertainment for adults (the “Mr. Nobody” song, people, just fantastic because he’s the guy who’s responsible for never cleaning up a toy or always doing something wrong at home – because it sure isn’t ever the fault of the kids) and plenty of physical comedy and colorful stories for the youngest among us. We all adored the range in costumes and the added perk of the Tooth Fairy towards the end.

Will she make it over the moon? Actors: Sam Edgerly, Anissa Hartline, Colin Cech and Dorea Schmidt. Photo Credit: Mike Horan

Will she make it over the moon? Actors: Sam Edgerly, Anissa Hartline, Colin Cech and Dorea Schmidt. Photo Credit: Mike Horan

Bottom line: My girls and their friend adored the entire show. There was a little boy in the audience who maybe was barely three and he was totally enthralled and engaging right back with the actors, just as my girls were engaged and anticipating the next development.  The suspense over whether the cow would ever make it over the moon, in her Udder Armour (get it, super clever) gear, was intense, friends.

There you have it – it’s fall, the opportunities for a fun and busy fall weekend are plentiful between pumpkin patches, apple picking and harvest festivals. Despite all that fall cheer, however, I would absolutely not miss this new musical production, at Adventure Theatre only until October 27, especially if you have anyone ages 3-10 in your house. When it ended, my four-year-old said to me “Mommy, I want to take this show home, so I can watch it again.”

There you have it. Out of the mouth of babes.

Tickets are $19 each and I hear they’re going fast. Also, if you are planning to attend a performance, Adventure Theatre MTC has partnered with local charity, the DC Diaper Bank, and is collecting diapers at each showing or during the week. They are asking for donations of diapers for bigger kids, not babies, so Pull-Ups or Night-Time diapers for toddlers is what they are specifically hoping to receive though, of course, any donation always helps.  I hope you’ll support this great local cause.

Disclosure: Adventure Theatre MTC invited me and my family to attend the final dress rehearsal the night before the show opened. My opinions here are all my own.

 

 

What I Learned Over Summer Break

Let’s pretend I were going back to school this week. Here’s what I’d tell my teacher I learned over summer break:

1. My children are cows. They eat all the time. Nothing reminds you more of this reality than summer break. The constant grazing drives me NUTS. Yet I can’t win this battle. I threatened at each meal if they didn’t finish what was on their plates, they would get nothing until the next meal. I am full of shit. My only option was to give-up feeding them on weekends and let their dad do it.

The constant grazing drives me nuts.My children are cows.

2. When sunscreen is concerned, every day is ground hog day. From Memorial Day to the present day, sunscreen must be applied on my extremely fair and red headed children EVERY DAY. Yet it is a daily battle, the whining, the complaining, the running away when they see the bottles come out of the drawer. Why? Why? Why is this still happening?

#GroundhogDay

#IHateSunscreen

3. I’m Not a Tiger Mom. We had big goals and dreams for what we were going to accomplish academically this summer. We didn’t. They are 7 and 4. It falls on me. Morning work time and word wall words happened in late June. By the time we were through July 4, forget it.

Haven’t read quite this many yet this summer

Practicing letters and numbers for my preschooler, again, we were hot to trot in June. By July, who needs numbers and letters, let’s turn on a show!!

#NotATigerMom

4. Summer Bucket Lists are Super Annoying.  Back to hopes, dreams, unicorns and wishes, we had BIG PLANS for this summer, I tell you. BIG PLANS. Does getting organized to hit the pool by 3pm count for anything?

5. Bike rides are happy-ish experiences for which even the most prepared are, apparently, never prepared.   My oldest started riding without training wheels in the spring. I had big ambitions for our summer days spent biking because we are steps from Rock Creek Park.

Even a vacation bike ride on the beach turned into an epic drama.

Even a vacation bike ride on the beach turned into an epic drama.

The world was our oyster. Until one day when we were heading out for a 3 mile round trip escapade and about 6/10ths of a mile from home, my youngest pointed out some deer, my oldest looked, swerved and had an epic wipe out. I swear there is still gravel in her shins. After safely getting off my bike, ensuring my youngest was stable in the bikeseat on the back of my bike, I went to tend to the gushing blood pouring from my oldest’s knees as she screamed bloody murder. Had there been any sharks or wolves lurking, we would have been screwed.

But see – I had no supplies with me. No band aids, no neosporin, no nothing. We had only the grass to wipe her blood all over.  And then, as luck would have it, my bike went tumbling down, bringing my youngest crashing to the ground, scraping up her elbow with blood now gushing from her arm.

#MotherOfTheYear?

Next bike ride, I was PREPARED. My backpack was filled with bandages, neosporin, band aids, water, I was a mobile CVS clinic.

Except when my eldest got stung by a hornet 4 miles from our house – think I was prepared for that?

Happy-ish Trails……..

The year I took back vacation. Or my kids gave it back.

The year I took back vacation. Or my kids gave it back.

6. Summer vacation can be reclaimed.  This one was a real surprise to me friends. Many of you know I’ve spent several summers writing about how vacation is actually “vacation.” I loathed those cruel parents on the beach who had the audacity to bring a MAGAZINE. Or could have conversations with their spouses. WHAT THE HELL were they doing, I scowled, while I chased, ran, scrambled, negotiated and wiped tears. Indeed, my friend so wisely dubbed vacation as actually just JOB RE-LOCATION.

I’ve written about it so much in the past.

By the end of the summer, I didn’t quite have the nerve to bring a book to the beach because through the crashing waves and squawking seagulls, I knew they could hear me open its pages and would come running, immediately hungry. But I sipped cool refreshing drinks, had uninterrupted conversations with Mr. WM and dare I say, RELAXED? It is true, it can happen to you if it hasn’t already, vacation does become a true word again. Not an ironic  word.

Believe, kittens. C’est vrai.

7. Children are allergic to closing screen doors.  My home is a shelter for flies. I can’t win this one.

What did you learn over summer break? What did I forget? Hit “Like” on Wired Momma’s Facebook page, or you’re totally missing out.

I Am Not the Babysitter

I am thrilled that we are hitting our stride here on WM with the guest posts. So far we’ve had two very different voices come forward with some great topics. Today’s guest post hails from a friend, a local blogger and someone I’m lucky to have met through the internet, through WM book club and I adore keeping up with her blog. Nicole Dash, writer behind Tiny Steps Mommy, mother to four and owner of her own business addresses some very real, very important issues – ones that do not stoke the mommy wars because what she’s writing about is something I believe men and women are guilty of – but it’s one I’ve noticed along the way as well.

a working mother with a baby speaking mobile phoneBefore we get started, let’s play a game. When you see someone walking into preschool – and this someone is a dad or a mom – but they are dressed totally down. Do you:

1. Assume they are a stay-at-home parent

2. Assume they work from home

3. Think about how you’re late for work and it must be nice to be strolling in late, in yoga pants, with an empty house at home

4. None of the above

Be honest. And maybe, your answer depends on the day. For me – it would depend on the day – and how late I am. But I’m not going to pretend like I haven’t sized people up and speculated. And trust me, I know this speculation is about ME and my decisions and honestly – nothing about them.

I’ve worked full-time in a demanding job along K Street, I’ve had a nanny, I’ve stopped working full-time and been “nothing but” a stay-at-home mom, and now I run my own consulting company, sometimes I work full-time, sometimes I work part-time- but I work out of my house – so the majority of people who see me during the day assume I am a “SAHM.” My point – we are a society that needs labels and defaults on assumptions. It’s how we assess situations, evaluate the other person standing next to us and move on. This doesn’t mean it is all laced with judgement or evil. It just means we do this. Do not pretend like you don’t.

Some of us are comfortable in our decisions, proud of the choices we’ve made and just don’t get defensive or reactionary when assumptions are made – flawed or not.

Some of us are riddled with doubt and second guess our decisions every day – whether it be about working or staying home, or summer camp options, or whether we have our kid signed up for not enough or too many activities – it doesn’t have to be a big thing – it’s just something we are evaluating and second guessing and wondering about.

Some of us are confident in our decisions but every once in a while, get sick of the assumptions. Some days   – that is me. Some days, I show up to the bus stop late, I am in shitty yoga pants with unwashed hair and I look a mess but I have clients breathing down my neck and deadlines to meet and more kids to get off to another school and a leaking basement – and then someone in professional clothes makes a passing comment that implies I’m “just a SAHM” (read: therefore I have really nothing to do) and I’ll stew all day. Other days I couldn’t give a rat’s ass. But that’s the point – we are all complicated beings that default on assumptions but often just don’t like it.

And THAT friends – is why I really like the post Nicole is bringing to us today. She’s pretty much had it. And she raises some excellent points on the implied value we place on the importance of tending to children all day long. In part, she’s taking on the patronizing “Oh, I don’t know how you do it” (read: I am pretty much to good for that work). And more importantly, how we value and define work.

See what you think, weigh in on the assumptions we make, tell me if you really don’t make any or maybe sometimes you do. Let’s talk. This isn’t a fight. I think it’s real and Nicole is giving it a voice.  And with that, I hand it over to Nicole, of Tiny Steps Mommy.

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How would you feel if you dedicated your heart, soul and energy into a profession that gets little-to-no respect? How would you feel knowing that there are people who look down on you because of a lack of understanding, a lack of caring, or a sense that what you do is beneath them? How would you feel if you spent the bulk of your time thinking about the well-being of others only to be treated poorly?

As a home-based child care provider, I have felt this sting more than once. I speak for myself, but I know many other child care providers, nannies, and even teachers who know exactly what I’m talking about. I care for and teach children for a living. There is nothing more important than our children, yet the people entrusted with this task are often not given their due respect.

When people ask what I do for a living and I say I run a daycare from my home, there are many assumptions made. Here are a few I have had to correct more than once.

  1. I simply added a couple of kids to my brood for extra cash.
  2. I change diapers and deal with crying kids all day long.
  3. I have no other options.
  4. I have the patience of a saint.
  5. I am a babysitter.
  6. I can keep my house sparkling because I’m home all day.
  7. It is brainless work that anyone can do.
  8. It’s easy and good money.
  9. I sit on my butt and watch children play all day long (while keeping up with soap operas).
  10. I have given up on having a “real” career.

I could go on, but I won’t. I know a lot of the assumptions made are probably meant to be harmless and are born out of ignorance, but I find many of them offensive. Interestingly there are stark similarities between some of the things on this list with what some SAHM cite as stereotypes about what it means to stay home with your children.

I have to ask why?

Does it lessen the guilt of depending on someone else to care for your children if you believe the “job” can be done by anyone? Do you believe that staying home or working from home is the “easy” way to do things? Does it make you feel superior? Does the fact that we don’t wear expensive suits or wear designer shoes in make us less important?

For many child care providers, caring for children is more than a job. It is a calling and a career. There are absolutely bad providers who only do it for the money, but you can find bad lawyers and doctors guilty of the same thing.

Yes, I change diapers. Yes, I have patience (at times). Yes, I am used to crying children. Yes, I watch children play, but more importantly I watch children flourish and discover and learn and grow.

I am not the babysitter.

I am a teacher, I am a marketing manager, I am a negotiator,  I am a contract writer, I am an accountant, I am an HR professional, I am a boss, I am a cook, I am a tax professional, I am a chief operating officer, I am a nutritionist, I am a nurse, I am a kisser of boo boos, I am a comforter in chief, I am a librarian, I am a princess on Mondays and a Superhero on Fridays, I am a counselor, I am a music teacher, I am a puppeteer, I am the eyes and ears of parents, I am a student,  I am a referee, I am a child advocate, I am a party planner, I am a professional organizer and I am a witness to all things awesome about the secret society of children.

I am a child care provider and I love what I do because of all the reasons I can’t explain. Oh and I do not have time to catch up on soap operas and my house is far from sparkling because I am too busy working hard at my career, so you can work hard at yours.

Nicole Dash is a writer, blogger and child care business owner who lives in the suburbs outside Washington, DC with her husband and four children. Nicole writes about family, life, parenting and caring for children on her heartfelt blog Tiny Steps Mommy.

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Thank you Nicole! I hope others weigh in here or on the WM Facebook page! If you’d like to send me a guest post, email me at wiredmomma@me.com. Be sure to also check out  Nicole’s blog Facebook page.