Tag Archive | "Attachment Parenting"

Why You Should Read: Beyond the Sling by Mayim Bialik

I read a book!  And because I read a book I feel the need to post about it since I deserve a pat on the back for making time to read said book with two young boys, running a small cloth diaper empire, and keeping up with Draw Something (just kidding, sort of).  The book is Beyond the Sling: A Real-Life Guide to Raising Confident, Loving Children the Attachment Parenting Way

Mayim Bialik has made a name for herself recently as a “spokesmom” for the Attachment Parenting way of life.  She is an actor and mother of two boys.  She is also the spokesperson for Holistic Moms Network and advocate for La Leche League.  Oh and she also holds a PhD in Neuroscience (which she mentions a few times in her book.  Sometimes ad nauseum but I guarantee you if I had a PhD in anything I’d find a way to drop that into every few sentences.)

I devoured Beyond the Sling in a span of three nights.  Each evening after the kids went to bed I started reading until my eyes crossed.  I was hesitant to read the book at all because frankly Mayim is on the “extreme” end of my parenting spectrum.  She is fully committed to living an AP lifestyle in every fashion.  I come in at a much more relaxed version of AP.  I identify with many aspects of the attachment parenting lifestyle but I have never read a book on the subject until now.  My own personal journey to “AP” started from my instinctual parenting style that happened to mimic the principles of AP.

The book is laid out in four sections: Part 1 is about Trusting Your Instincts.  Part 2 is about What Baby Needs.  Part 3 is about What Baby Doesn’t Need.  Part 4 is What Mommy Needs.

I won’t go over the entire book and explain where I agreed with Mayim and where I found myself on another page.  I will say I agreed with her more than I did not.  Mayim will tell you over and over that this is not a parenting manual.  She has a unique perspective (she does drop some knowledge on you about why an attachment parenting style works best- proven by neuroscience and how the brain of a child operates) and is very honest about her own life experience.  Many would say she is preaching from an unreachable mountain top because she is a celebrity and has behind the scenes help from a personal staff of chefs, nannies, and housekeepers.  On the contrary, it appears her finances are no better than many upper middle class families.  Her lifestyle is frugal by choice and necessity and she admits in the book to only having vacations when they are financed by speaking engagements.  If you were afraid to read the book for that reason alone then know she is coming from a place more like our own (except that she IS famous and DOES live in LA.)  She is promoting a style of parenting that is not mainstream and she obviously believes in this lifestyle.  Those who don’t might find her writing dismissive of other styles even though she often sneaks in a “and if you do, that’s ok.” for extra coverage.

Reading Beyond the Sling re-ignited the passion I have for sharing my experience here on the blog and elsewhere.  I have two amazing boys and I credit the work my husband and I do to cater to their needs appropriately and lovingly.  We don’t practice Cry it Out.  I feed my son when he asks (by signing since he is not yet verbal.)  I bounce my youngest son to sleep every single night because it is what works, what he likes, and it keeps us both happy (for now.)  I just want to share some of the most poignant parts of the book that made me nod my head in agreement and expound on them with examples from my own parenting journey thus far.

Society puts pressure on babies to develop much sooner than they should.  Babies are expected to speak early, sit early, roll over, and so on.  Yes, Yes, and Yes!  I recall as a first time mom how much value I placed on the milestones of my son.  He isn’t sitting up and 80% of babies his age are sitting by now.  He isn’t speaking and everyone else’s babies are talking, why isn’t he talking?  I spent a lot of energy on these issues.  One milestone “sleeping through the night” is one that Fletcher really hit “late.”  If I were to tell myself then one thing that I know now I would simply say “put away the baby books, leave your message-board for babies born that month so you can stop comparing every move, and parent to your instinct and not to the advice of others.”

Natural Birth isn’t a choice for women who want to be “martyrs.”  The act of giving birth naturally is amazing and one of the best experiences of my life.  I didn’t do it for a merit badge.  I did it because of the benefits for the baby and myself.  I did it because I realized how many problems arose because I didn’t do it the first time.  My baby was born too early (what I learned from my induction) and was a lazy nurser.  I had a terrible labor that I can hardly remember because I wasn’t present.  The differences between my two children are astounding and so was my own recovery period.  Natural birth (and the care from my midwives I received) most certainly had a positive effect on my second son and I, who was born at home.  The outlook by many that we choose natural birth so that we can brag is silly.  However it is something to be proud of and is the biggest adrenaline rush I have ever had.

Breastfeeding is easy, even when it’s hard.  Amen.  Mayim experienced many, many, many issues with breastfeeding.  I also fought to nurse my first son and relied on lactation consultants to get through.  I am so glad we beat those first few months of challenges because afterwards we had a smooth sailing breastfeeding relationship.  With my second son I still had problems. Had I not had a network of support I might have failed- it turned out that Everett was Tongue Tied and needed to be clipped in order to latch properly.  It is easy and natural and hard and complicated all at the same time.  But when it clicks you will have this gift like no other that never requires washing bottles (unless you are pumping part time or full time and for that you have my respect!) and never having to run to the store for more milk.

Babies want to be held (or worn.)  Mayim points out a fact that some parents don’t expect and others refuse to believe or give in to- babies love to be held.  I was also actually surprised that I had to be holding my first son every waking moment.  There were times when he would be asleep in my arms and any attempt at laying him down o moving was met with fierce cries.  So I sat.  And sat.  The luxury of baby number one.  I called my husband and begged him to come home because I was starving and couldn’t get up to get food.  Eventually I discovered babywearing and that opened up many doors (including those to the refrigerator while baby napped on my chest and I was hands free.)

Sleeping alone can be lonely.  For babies and for adults.  I was deathly afraid to sleep with my first son because co-sleeping had a very bad rap and still does.  Afraid I would kill my son I endured exhaustion like no other.  He woke 6-12 times a night to nurse and often I was up all night getting him latched, fed, and asleep.  One day I napped with him when hubby was home.  That translated to part time bed-sharing.  Then full time.  And then I was a co-sleeping parent.  The joy co-sleeping brought me with my first son was unexpected.  I loved waking to his baby smiles, baby kisses, baby cuddles.  I enjoyed sleeping “all night” even though I woke a few times to nurse him.  Is he scarred for life?  I don’t think so.  He sleeps full 10-12 hours nights in his own bed (read our jounrey to this point) and with no fighting.  If the argument is that c0-sleeping fosters bad sleep habits down the line I don’t see it.  He learned that his parents loves him, protected him, and would always be there for his needs.  I think these ideas made him a more independent child.  Crying it out, explained by Mayim in the book and many others in other literature, teaches children that their parents aren’t there for them when they need it.

Kids don’t understand the concept of sharing and Mayim doesn’t like forcing kids to share.  I learned something new from this book:  I also don’t like forcing kids to share.  My gut hated interfering in playdates and on playgrounds when my son grabbed a toy from another child or one was ripped away from him.  I felt very “helicopter” parent as I demanded he return an item or explained that the toy was taken from him so he should suck it up and share it.  Either way it felt like I was teaching my child his needs or wants were less important than the other children’s.  I am a total people pleaser, I bend at every request or acquiesce when really I don’t want to.  For weeks I’ve contemplated this and wondered if my methods in public settings regarding sharing were teaching my son the same.  Thankfully I read this book and the timely section on sharing.  How will I handle this touchy subject amongst other parents when my son refuses to share a toy he is really enjoying?  Well, Mayim has some ideas.  Will I always choose this route?  Probably not.  But I don’t want my sons growing up thinking they come last.  By setting the example in the home and with his brother I’m hoping both boys learn sharing when their brains best comprehend it.  Fletcher gets the concept for the most part but Ev is still a toddler and so this section applied more to him.

“Illogical consequences” and Gentle Discipline.  This section on gentle discipline both ignited my desire to master it and at the same time had me doubting the possibility of it entirely. I don’t spank at all or use any form or physical punishment.  We do practice “time-outs” which Mayim doesn’t feel fits GD.  The section that most inspired me was focused on “illogical consequences.”  I saw myself in the examples given- “If you don’t eat your dinner you can’t go outside and play” would be a sentence spoken recently by me to my son.  This technique works for me but I learned why and the reason left me wanting to change my tactics.  I’ve been doing really well with more “logical” consequences and I have noticed these still work.  It sometimes takes me a minute to figure out what the consequence is and so far some have been quite silly but this whole thing is still new to me.  In general I am hoping to continue working on being less like my own parents were (yelling, raising my voice, enacting frequent punishments that were sometimes cruel or excessive) and more kind, level headed, yet effective in my discipline.

I did roll my eyes a bit when Mayim had quite a bit to say about “bribery” for children when trying to get a good outcome.  I don’t like bribery but I use it.  Maybe more than I should.  I can’t think of a parent who hasn’t, especially in a pinch, offered a sweet treat or reward for good behavior.  I can see where she is coming from in her reasoning but I can’t remove that tool from my parenting arsenal, sorry Mayim!

Keeping your relationships strong.  I can’t say enough good things about this section.  Many aspects of AP look, to outsiders, as a sure fire way to lose your husband, family, and friends.  Sleep with your baby=never have sex again.  Breastfeed past 6 months= never go on a date or vacation/ lose your boobs and your husband’s interest in them.  Etc, etc.  I will be the first to admit (and so will most other moms) that many of the non mainstream parenting choices can make other relationships difficult to maintain.  But having children is bound to change your life and how you relate to your husband and friends regardless.  I always tell myself (and my husband when he complains- yes he has and does complain about some of my choices) that this period of our lives is so short and also so precious.  I get jealous when I miss some really amazing opportunities to go out but there will be more chances.  There are some pretty sound advice nuggets on how to recharge yourself and your relationships with others.

It seems as if I am now worshipping the ground Maim Bialik walks on.  I assure you I am not.  I did find a lot of comfort and inspiration in this book.  Most of my parenting desires and my style has been worked out as a second time mother but I would have loved this book as a first time mom when my instincts were in place but I didn’t have the knowledge or guts to follow it all.  Parents who are finding that they question the conventional parenting advice they receive, who doubt that leaving a baby in a crib alone to cry, who think feeding a baby when they are hungry is not spoiling them, who need to hear that they aren’t weird but are in fact doing a great service by listening to their instincts- these are people who should read Beyond the Sling.

 

To those wondering, I did not receive a free promotional copy of the book.  In fact I walked into a Barnes and Noble and paid $23.00 for the thing.  Had I known Amazon.com was so much cheaper (affiliate link) I would have ordered online.  Oh well!  You can benefit!  I’m “paying it forward” by sending my copy to a random winner.  Just use the form below.  Please only enter if you really want to read the book and plan to.

 

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“Sorry, Honey. I can’t have sex tonight because I am lactating.”

Photo Credit: Flickr, AFP PHOTO/PHILIPPE DESMAZES

Photo Credit: Flickr, AFP PHOTO/PHILIPPE DESMAZES

This article was recently brought to my attention, however it appears that it is 4 years old.  Since the first publishing Rabbi Shmuley has since apologized.  I address that at the end of my response.  No matter how old the article is it is still alive and kicking on the internet and doing damage to new and expecting mothers, perpetuating “booby traps.

Recently I read the article by Rabbi Shmuley titled “Moms, Don’t Forget to feed Your Marriages” which may as well have been titled “Moms, Screw Nature, Use a Bottle and Give your Husband a Blow Job.”

While I agree being a Mom sometimes makes being a Wife a chore, I think most husbands (good ones that is) will concede that taking care of your child is the priority.  This includes breastfeeding them for as long as the mother and child wish.  In the article, 11 months is thought to be too long!  11 months is a great acheivement, but not all mothers wish to stop there.  As much as my husband would have liked having me back 100% and our bed, he knew how much breastfeeding meant to my son and I.  Plus, he didn’t have to wake in the middle of the night to feed him.  PLUS, any time my son was cranky, I had these magic things that instantly shut him up.

Even if you take breastfeeding out of the parenting equation, marriage still isn’t easy.  Raising a child is a 24/7 obligation.  One that leaves little time for romance and sexy time.  Showering is a chore for most moms if they stay at home.  Then there is the constant house cleaning, dish washing, butt wiping, tamtrum handling, and toddler wrestling.  By bed time most days I just want to veg on the couch and eat ice cream, with or without my hubby.  He is also tired from his day job and night time toddlering that he appreciates the quiet time by playing video games.  These things make us happy, but don’t necessarily equal a candle lit dinner.

In truth, we have been trying to prioritize our marriage by going out alone at least once a month.  Somehow this keeps getting put on the back burner.  We have to find a sitter and arrange somewhere to go.

I am not even breastfeeding anymore!  But our lives are less than sexy sometimes.  The Rabbi wants to see happy, in love couples.  And breastfeeding supposedly makes that impossible.  Really?  Because even while nursing my husband and I took time to hug, to kiss, to cuddle, to say “I Love You” in front of our son, or not.  Being in love doesn’t mean having sex like you are teenagers.  Any married couple knows sex in college and sex after kids are not the same.  Being in love means loving each other even without the crazy drunk pre-kids sex.

Saying breastfeeding turns your husband off may or may not be true.  But that shouldn’t even matter.  I personally got to a point where I wanted my breasts to be left alone by everyone.  I assure you though, my husband never lost interest in them.  And my husband saw me give birth as well, and he still loves me!  He didn’t get “all up in that” but he saw things.  More things than I saw.  Yet we still managed to make another human baby, and I was breastfeeding then too!

Regarding nursing in public, the Rabbi has it all wrong there too.  Some men let their wives run around half naked for the world to see.  To each their own.  But when a mother has the top half of her breast exposed (or not even) this is considered indecent or overexposure?  This will extinguish the spark?!?!  Rabbi, do you know men?  Men get turned on by waking up in the morning.  I think they can deal with their wives feeding their own children on a park bench without a blanket over their heads.  You know what this made me think of?  This reminded me of conservative Muslim women who have to wear burkas in public and only their husbands can see their bodies, any of it.

Articles like this do a disservice to potential mothers.  Women who love their husband and want nothing more than to have a relationship with them even after the baby comes.  Will they choose to formula feed for fear of losing an intimate relationship with their husbands?  Maybe.  Is that necessary?  No.  Plenty of women breastfeed their children for 1, 2, even 3 or more years and still have a loving relationship with their husbands.  And plenty of women formula feed and don’t.  And Vice Versa.  I can’t say there aren’t men who fit this article.  But those men suck.  If your husband can’t be adult enough to get over breastfeeding, you don’t need him.

*** After I wrote this, but before publishing it, someone posted a follow-up by Rabbi Shmuley since he received quite the backlash from his writing.  The article orginally appeared 4 years ago and looks to have been recently republished on Beliefnet.com.  His response can be read on his website. Still, even after apologizing and back pedaling, the damage was done.  Not only to his reputation, but to potential influential readers of his old article.  His first article comes off as misogynistic which he acknowledges.  I understand the point he is trying to make, which is valid, but he did it all wrong. Still, I find the apology a small step compared to the weight and tone of the first article.

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Radical Parenting- My Summary of Discovery Health’s Show on AP parents

dischealthI was very late to the party.  I only learned about Discovery Health’s show Radical Parenting a few days before it aired, after catching a tweet about it.  I immediately set my DVR to record but ended up watching it live: a rarity in my home.

Before the show aired I learned about the controversy over the term “radical parenting.”  The show itself featured three families: an “unschooling” family, a family who practiced “attachment parenting,” and a family who raises their children in a “gender neutral” environment.

I will admit to not being into homeschooling, and definitely not unschooling.  I still watched the segment with an open mind, hoping to have it prove to me that unschooling is a viable method to educate children.  Frankly, that didn’t happen.  While I support families making choices for their families that work for them, I know unschooling is not for me.  I was happy to see that both parents were very well educated, so they have the tools to teach their children.  And, in a way, knowing they had both been to college and made the decision to unschool did carry some weight with me that maybe it wasn’t completely crazy!

The second segment followed an AP family.  If there was a rule book for AP living, I believe this family would be following it completely.  The highlight of this portion of the show was seeing a child ECing!  They were so good at EC that they didn’t use diapers, and never had.  Part of their success had to be contributed to the fact that their son was worn in a sling the majority of his life.  His cues partly involved squirming out of his sling when he needed to go to the potty.  Extended breastfeeding was also discussed, and the mother was even shown actually nursing!  Pretty cool!  This family also coslept with their younger children, something I was also happy to see on TV.  They did have to bust out the “crazy” a little.  A placenta was involved, but not to be eaten, just to plant.  A-ok with me.

The final segment had The Feminist Breeder‘s family talking about their lives as a “gender neutral” family.  They happened to come off as the most “normal” of the three, and had a very likeable family.  Their purpose was to raise boys who were feminist minded.  They allowed their boys to play with boy and girl toys, and liked to show both parents playing male and female roles interchangeably.  I agreed with everything they did, but I think calling it a name was not needed.  It seems to me it is something most parents do.  I personally allow my son to play with whatever he wants, be it a boy or girl toy.  Because he has an affinity for necklaces and hugging boys I do joke about his preferences, and I would love him no matter what!

Overall, I was happy to see these families profiled to let tv viewers see the way the other half lives.  I especially love seeing breastfeeding on tv!  I heard The Feminist Breeder’s husband was washing cloth diapers but I was tweeting during the show and must have missed it.

PS.  If you missed the show it airs again on Discovery Health on March 6 at 1:00 pm.  That is today people!

Did you see the show?  What did you think?

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Welcome!

If you have been visiting my blog from the get go you will notice many, many changes.  It has and will always be a work in progress.  What blog or website isn’t?  The two new recent developments:  I am part of the BlogHer ad network, and I am blogging for Justmommies.com.  For people visiting my site directly the only change visible is the new ad network.  If you are stopping over from Justmommies.com then “Welcome!”

 

I joined JM when I was pregnant.   I first started posting on the Gestational Diabetes board.  At the time I thought my life was ending.  No more carbs!!!  But I realized it is completely manageable and would end at delivery.  Reading those posts helped.  At about the same time I started posting newbie questions on their Cloth Diapering forum.   What a resource that board was and still is for me.  Cloth Diapering is such an overwhelming idea at first.  It takes a lot of online research to understand.  Not many people have stores or classes in their area they can take, which is why that forum was so amazingly helpful and the women are all wonderful.

I never posted in the Due Date Club- November 2008 while I was pregnant.  I was intimidated by how close the women seemed to be; they had bonded since they found out they were pregnant in most cases, and I didn’t want to intrude.  I did lurk when I found JM; many of their stories helped me personally.  One in particular was heartbreaking.  I decided to take the plunge and introduce myself after my son was born.  I really needed support from other moms going through the exact same situation.  I am so glad I did!  

I love all of the women on my “Playroom” as it is called now that all of our babies are here.  I can’t imagine my life now without obsessively refreshing our PR to see new posts!  While sometimes I wish I never found them since my housework has suffered immensely.  

Now on JM I visit my PR, the Cloth Diapering board, The Arts and Crafts board, Breastfeeding, and occasionally Attachment parenting (I don’t post on AP, just lurk).  My advice to anyone reading this who isn’t active on JM: try it out!  If you don’t like it, don’t go back.  Oh, and no drama!  JM is a drama free community :)

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