Tomboys & “Girlie Boys”

Shiloh Pitt...Dresses how she wants....which seems about right for little kids

This week I wrote a piece for Huffington Post DC which is buzzing around in a way that I didn’t anticipate. Hopefully it resonates with people because I wrote it about my own experience so far raising a 3-year-old tomboy. I wonder why we dump our own gender identity issues on kids as young as preschool? We praise little girls for being tom boys and enjoying “boy toys” like dinosaurs and pirates – but we think little boys shouldn’t like Princess dresses or playing with dolls. My conclusion is this: we are praising girls for male like qualities but calling boys weak for being drawn to feminine things. And I’m talking about preschoolers here. Sending a message that toys associated with boys are strong and those associated with girls are weak, at such a young age, is a slippery slope that makes me uncomfortable. As this piece has built some momentum online, it hit me that we have one celebrity who is really bucking the trend in her little daughter – and that is Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt with Shiloh Jolie-Pitt – can you think of a more public kid celebrity who embodies tom boy? And yet we don’t even have a word for little boys who like “girlie” things.  

I hope you’ll read the piece and comment or share! And as always, for more fun, frolic, Moi Loves Moi, and deep thinking….be sure to “Like” the Wired Momma Facebook page!

Disney on Ice Discount Code & Other Fab Kids Events

Can't wait to see the new Disney on Ice Show!

As a special New Years treat to my dear readers, I have a discount code for next month’s Disney on Ice 100 Years of Magic show at the Verizon Center. Plug in BLOG12 into Ticketmaster when you are purchasing your tickets and you’ll receive 20% off the ticket price. This makes the least expensive tickets $15. We always love the show – we went last February and my then 2-year-old was mesmerized. We also went in October and loved it. This February we are particularly excited about the Lion King! Be sure to “Like” the Wired Momma FB page for more updates on this show, including a chance to win tickets!

Also wanted to be sure you all knew that the newest production at Adventure Theatre in Glen Echo opens on January 20 – The Snowy Day – a musical. I cannot wait. It’s for kids ages Pre-K and up. I’m sure tickets will go fast. I’ll diabetes post a review after we go see it when it opens. Meanwhile over at the fabulous Puppet Co, neighbors to Adventure Theatre, Peter & The Wolf opens January 13. Two wonderful chances to keep the kids busy during the doldrum days of January!!

Finally,  January is Home Organization month – which probably surprises no one. And I’ve seriously caught the home organization bug…which I do every January…and it all bottoms out and fails on me by the spring. Anyhoo…local stylist and home organization expert, Rachel Strisik, is hosting some free seminars this month on organizing kids stuff and managing paper. The free kids seminar is next Wednesday at the Cleveland Park Library from 10:30-11:30. The paper seminar is Sunday January 22 from 10:30-11:30 at the Potomac Community Center in Potomac, MD. Look for my interview with the fabulous Rachel next week!

Happy weekend…and if you are really looking for some indoor fun….the Chillum Splash Pool is one of my all-time fav indoor kids burn-that-energy places around the Beltway.

Getting Ready for Preschool?

Kidville U Fun!

Last week I had the pleasure of attending the Kidville Open House in Bethesda. I was so delighted that the famed New York franchise moved its DC location from Rockville Pike to the way more convenient downtown Bethesda. Until last week, I just didn’t have a chance to get in there and check it out.  I went with the intent of exploring class options for my 3-year-old now that we are staring down the doldrum cold days of winter but was delighted to learn about the Kidville University Preschool program they also offer. My youngest is already enrolled in preschool but if she were just 2, I would be all over the Kidville U program.  Beyond a tour of the lovely and very clean, kid-friendly facility, I had a chance to speak with Anjali Varma, the franchise owner of Bethesda’s Kidville. Avid readers of WM know that I delight in meeting up with local moms who have changed the path of their business careers and found a new direction after having kids. Anjali falls into that category. After business school and many years working for a large company, she decided her direction was different once she had her two sons, now 4 and 1.5, and took a leap of faith to be the franchise owner of Kidville. What appeals to me about the Kidville U program for the younger ones is the gradual separation element – so once you feel your child is ready – you can leave – and then you can go enjoy yourself in downtown Bethesda and relish in some peace and quiet!  Beyond the Kidville U, as many of you probably know, there is a host of amazing classes offered at Kidville for babies from 0-6 months all the way up to 6-years-old (I am excited to try out the Rockin Railroad class with my 3-year-old next month), along with some open gym opportunities for members and a conveniently located place to get your kids haircut…in the lobby of Kidville, in some totally awesome car chairs. Anjali also offers parenting seminars including CPR classes, sleep training and coming soon, a home organization class, for parents. You can find more information out about Kidville and upcoming programs on their blog.

If you are interested in exploring a pre-school alternative program, I’d urge you to look into the one at Kidville, here is some more information about it, the new semester begins January 9:

Kidville University, Kidville’s pre-school alternative program, is a gradual separation program for ages 2.0-3.3 years.  The class meets two hours per day, twice a week.  (M/W or T/Th 9:30-11:30 am)

Children currently 22 months – 3.1 years old will be eligible for the KVU program for Winter ’12 and registration is in full swing!

KVU® The Kidville University (KVU) program guides toddlers through social skills within a playful setting as they transition to school.The class offers a curriculum that stimulates their natural curiosity as they explore new ideas. Play centers such as blocks, dramatic play, a book corner, sensory and art, small and big-muscle play encourage young children to touch, try, and think creatively.

Activities in this stimulating two-hour class include: group welcome, circle songs and music, storytelling, large and small group activities, art and sensory play, as well as science and math exploration. Each class includes 30 minutes of gym time. Appropriate transitions between activities allow your child to recognize and become familiar with the structure of the day, and to look forward to the next activity.

Focusing on the relationships between physical, social/emotional, language, cognitive, and artistic development, the KVU philosophy and approach teaches children appropriate social skills needed for school and life. A small teacher-child ratio ensures individualized attention and a caring lap for each child as he or she makes the first transitions to separation and builds trusting relationships with his or her teachers.

Medication Negotiation: Help me, help you, kid

The Jerry Maguire scene has been on repeat in my head all week: HELP ME HELP YOU.

HELP ME HELP YOU

Is what I’ve wanted to scream at my 3-year-old innumerable times. Sure, have a raging fever and spit out the Tylenol. That really hurts me. Well, actually it does hurt me. Maybe more than it hurts her, depending on what horrible time of the night it is. But why do sick kids make it so damn difficult to help relieve their misery with pain reliever? Seriously.

Why am I asking why.

Why not, right? If they make even the most mundane task, difficult, why not make something designed to help them feel better, difficult.

After a week of having a sick 3-year-old, I have since devised and modified some strategies for my youngest that previously worked on my older child when she was younger and sick. I’d be lying if I didn’t tell you that I wondered a few times if some covert CIA prisoner training would help me learn how to trick my sick prisoner into taking her medicine and keeping it down. I’m not above questionable methods when operating on little sleep and even less patience. At one point I considered feigning a toddler dental emergency so I could get her mouth propped open and dose her up that way.  Seems harmless enough, doesn’t it?

I even conducted a 15 minute intense brainstorming session with my mother on how best to dose her up during the inevitable multiple-times night wakings, crying, with fever peaking and yet still refusing the medicine. The logic behind protesting medication is something I’d pay big money for in that toddler-tell-all that I’m sure will be a best-seller if one of these damn kids would just give it up!

So today, because it is kid-sick-season, I offer you my best-of approaches and I’d love to hear what schemes and trickery work for you because we all know these tricks have an expiration date and the savvy toddler will wait until the next illness at 3am to let you know this trick ain’t working any more.

The Syringe Sneak Attack: The Element of Surprise

This particular technique works only on the youngest of the toddler set, in my experience, and requires cat-like reflexes on the part of the drug administrator and the distraction only a solid episode of the Backyardigans or Dora can provide. The drug administrator must first do some warm up stretches, loosen up the arms, the fingers, maybe a few jumping jacks. Then evaluate the seating position of the toddler. Can he see you from his peripheral vision? Then abort the mission. Can you approach him on the right angle that works best with your hand-eye coordination? For instance, a sneak attack attempt with the loaded syringe into the left side of my toddler’s mouth results in a #parentingfail. I have to get it into her right side. Evaluate their seating position and vision limitations. Are they preoccupied enough? Is it the trifecta of dosage opportunities? If so, you must approach quickly, eject the medication at warp speed accurately into the back corner of their mouth and then move quickly away from said subject. Then enjoy the rush that comes with defeating your competitor in this match. The victories are small but meaningful to a tired parent.  If the element of surprise is foiled by an older sibling who rats out your approach or a show ending, forget it, the Tylenol will immediately be spit back out (hence why you move quickly away but not out of eye sight). If the toddler is closer to 3 than 2, in my experience, they are too savvy for this technique.

The Prolonged Negotiation: Candy

My neighbor tipped me off to this technique this week. I’ve mistakenly been attempting to dose up my kid quickly and just get it over with, despite how frequently she spits it right back out. Turns out, it can take 15-20 minutes to drink one tsp of Tylenol but if it gets it into her system, then I am prepared to pack my patience. The lynchpin to the success of this technique is bribery – what do you have that the toddler wants ENOUGH that they will participate in said game? In my house, as I’m sure in yours, it’s candy. Oddly, it must have something to do with the shiny lid to the breath mints, but the Icebreakers pulled up from the rear as what I would consider the LEAST appealing “candy” into the biggest motivator this week, along with marshmellows or life saver gummies. Typically we would rotate through all three, take a sip, get a piece, take a bigger sip, get another piece, and so on. This technique, while painfully long, tends to result in the least amount of drama chez moi. Another small victory but this time for both parties – kid gets candy and medicine, parent gets medicated kid.

Life savers, Icebreakers, Marshmellows & Medicine....all part of the fun

The O’Dark Thirty Slurpee: The Petri Dish of Deceit

 Finally, the piece de resistance, the most brilliantly executed scam to get her to take the medicine came from my prolonged brainstorming conference call with my mom. How to best get a sick, fever-ridden 3-year-old to take another dose of medicine at 2am when mommy’s reflexes are definitely not cat-like and no one has the patience for a prolonged candy negotiation yet it is critical that they digest another dosage so everyone can go back to sleep? This requires some advance work, some strategy and organizing all the tools to execute it properly. We discussed several options when finally my mom suggested the old faithful: Popsicle. Who ever says no to a popsicle? Even at 2am? So what did I do? Carefully considering the importance of her taking the entire dose and not diluting it too much with some kind of liquid, we agreed that I should cut a tip-off a popsicle, mash it up so it has the consistency of a slurpee, then put it back in the freezer. Then in the middle of the night, when she’s crying in my room, retrieve the petri dish of deceit from the freezer, quickly squirt the appropriate amount of Tylenol into the slurpee (clearly your tools and medicine is lined up ready for you), then innocently offer her a cool refreshing slurpee sip, which in the dark and their sleepy toddler haze, seems perfectly reasonable and quite lovely. It’s a win-win. This approach worked brilliantly for me, much to my great relief. I even lined it up ready for the next night but she fortunately didn’t need it.

Please tell me I am not alone in this agony. What techniques work for you?

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