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Guilt No More

Wednesday, November 30th, 2011

Kudos to Redbook for declaring November 30, 2011 as No-Judgment Day!

Ever since our book was published in 2005, we have had the pleasure of hearing sighs of relief from people all over the world when we remind them none of us became parents to be tormented and miserable our entire lives. Parenting is a learning process and, thank goodness, our children are very forgiving of our goofs along the way. Now, it is time once again to follow the lead of the children and say, “It’s OK. We’re doing the very best we can and we’d love to all support each other.”

It’s great to see stories like the one from Charlotte Hilton Andersen of moms helping each other out instead of criticizing or competing. What have you done to support a parent in the past and what can you do today, and everyday, to keep the love paying forward?

As Devra likes to say, “The grass is always greener on the other side so let’s take down the fence and practice beautiful lawn maintenance for everyone!”

Guilt-Free Parenting Week

Tuesday, March 1st, 2011

What a week for us to return to blogging! Gotta give a shout out to a journalist Katy Rank Lev who sent us an email today congratulating us on the nice write up she read over on RookieMoms. So paying it forward, thank you Whitney and Heather, you know we are both HUGE fans of your book/blog. You gals rock!

In celebration of Guilt-free Parenting Week, we’re going to give away a signed copy of the very book that started it all, our award winning parenting book Mommy Guilt: Learn To Worry Less, Focus on What Matters Most and Raise Happier Kids. All you have to do is leave a comment letting us know you’ve stopped by. If you want to share how you plan to alleviate your parental angst, how you can help someone else enjoy their parenting more or just tell us about a time when you felt guilt or didn’t, that’s okay too. Or if you don’t want to we’re not going to guilt trip you about it.

We’ll announce the winner on Monday. Only because we are late getting in on the Guilt-free Parenting action and don’t want anyone to feel guilty that they missed our giveaway!

Do you need a new ritual but you can’t break free from the old ones?

Wednesday, September 22nd, 2010

The Jewish High Holidays (or the Hi-Ho’s as our rabbi in Wichita put it) came up fast upon Aviva and me.  See, this is the challenge with holidays that follow a lunar calendar, one year they are in one month, the next year in another.  And if you don’t  pay attention, you can get caught off guard on the dates. This year was especially rough because Rosh Hashanah hit two days after school had begun for my kids, which also meant two days after I began a long-term substitute social worker position at a local high school.   To say things are chaotic around here would be the understatement of 5771!

For those who are not M.O.T.‘s so to speak, the New Year is welcomed on January 1, but for the Jews, we welcome a new year somewhere around the September/October time frame. However, even if I were not Jewish, it would seem strange to me to begin a new year in what feels akin to mid-year. Because really, other than the New Year, what else begins in January?  When I went to check out January 1 in years gone by, HGTV was conducting their Dream Home Giveaway and the city of Seattle had banned styrofoam.  Surely both represent new beginnings and fresh starts for so many of us.  No? Not you? Really?!

For me the fall has always been a series of new beginnings, the start of a new school year, the beginning of football season, the end of summer and the beginning of autumn, leaves begin to turn new colors (if you happen to live in an area with that season), the fiscal year starts up and Saturday Night Live is once again LIVE. The fiscal year has commenced, as have many new jobs.

Autumn, to me, just feels like a clean slate, a time to try new things.

Our rabbi here in Northern Virginia gave a sermon last week on rituals. While I’m not going to get even more Jewy on you, than I already have, what I will say is the point of his talk happened to be whatever ritual we do, we should do it while engaged in the meaning of what we are doing–being mindful of what the ritual means.

Many of us go through The Motions because:

We believe it’s what we’re supposed to do,

or

It’s what our parents did,

or

We think  others expect us to do it like that

What we forget is these rituals don’t have to be identical to that of anyone else.  Tweaking them for what works for our family is perfectly okay.   We can switch the way we carry out a ritual depending upon the amount of time we have available and make adjustments for the income we bring in. Where is it written the ritual must always be the same?  Certainly the first person who performed the ritual had to start from scratch. Get it out of your head doing things differently has an expiration date or must be practiced in a time honored tradition.  Own your own tradition!

Isn’t a ritual even more meaningful if we are considering what it is we are actually doing?

For instance, who said a “family dinner” needs to be at dinner time? If you know your family can really only muster “family snack” or even “family lunch” then do it.  Certainly catching up with one another daily is important, and a priority,  but if dinner together has become stressful due to other factors like work schedules, homework, etc, then try to find another time to spend together as a family. And just do it as many times as you are able. There will be some weeks it’s easier than others, and that’s okay. Just think about what you are doing and why you are doing it. Be mindful. Be present. Communicate with one another about  the why you are doing as you do it it.

Which brings me to the next point, are you able? Let’s keep with the dinner theme.  Take a look at what all of you are doing in your family.  Are they “needs” or “wants?”  If it’s a need, then there may be no choice but to schedule around it. No one expects anyone to quit their job in order to get to the dinner table by 6:00 every evening.  But “Wants” aren’t always negotiable either.  Lots of experts will tell you “Wants” are luxuries, things we don’t really need. However, I would argue “wants” are often run neck and neck with “needs.” “Wants” provide us with emotional income which is often just as integral to our lives as financial income. Consider your family “wants” by having everyone tell you what they want, what they really really want.  Singing it like the Spice Girls is optional.

As you contemplate figuring out how to fulfill “wants” and “needs”-your own, your family’s- Woody Allen pops into my head.  (Let me just say, the pre-weirdo Woody Allen). It’s the scene from Hannah and Her Sisters where Woody Allen’s character Mickey is visiting his parents and begins to lament about the meaning of life and why things happen the way they do. Mickey’s father  bellows back at him,  ”How the hell do I know why there were Nazis? I don’t know how a can opener works!” Sometimes we get lost in the largess of our lives, and it helps to bring things back to manageable pieces we can then either work around, fit together, hand over to someone else or even throw away. But in order to do any of that, we need to be mindful of what we are doing and why we are doing it.

So as our families go into a new year for us, Aviva and I  hope you experience a new beginning too. Maybe one where you become more mindful of the rituals in your life and what doing them means to you and your family.  You don’t have to wait until January 1 to make a change, because if January 1st means nothing to you, doesn’t symbolize a new beginning, then why go through the motions of observing it as a new year?

Make a new beginning whenever you want. The fall is as good a time as January 1st.  There is no deadline on doing things differently. So whether you just Jew It or Just Do It, we hope you think up something new to begin.  And to borrow from a classic… maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow, but soon.

By the way, if you are wondering about the photo, it’s the chocolate chip challah I made for the new year.  It’s tradition to make a round challah for Rosh Hashanah and often raisins are added to the bread to represent that there should be sweetness in the coming year.  I do make a round challah for the new year, but  I use chocolate chips instead of raisins. Tradition says “RAISINS!” I say semi-sweet chips represent both aspects of a new year, some bitter with the sweet.  And I hate cooked raisins and so do my kids.  Mindful ritual put into practice.

Anatomy of Guilt

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

Months ago when Ilisa Cohen, a Senior Editor at Working Mother Magazine, contacted us and requested an interview.  Ilisa had no idea we seriously considered turning her down.  Not because we don’t like being interviewed, if you’ve ever met Aviva and me  you know we both love to talk. About anything. Really. Anything. Need proof? Here….

Are we afraid of being misquoted? Nah. Misquotes can always be corrected. Not a deal breaker by any means. The reason we hesitated is we’ve been vocal regarding our lack of confidence in the “Best Company” lists Working Mother Magazine publishes annually.   We’ve never thought more than a handful of companies listed in the 100 actually belong on those lists.  While there are a few diamonds in mud, a majority of the companies on the list aren’t really “Best” at all. The question we asked of ourselves was, “Would it be hypocritical for us to contribute our commentary for an article being published in Working Mother Magazine?”

After careful consideration, we decided to accept the interview.  The way we came to this decision is the topic was guilt, not family/work policy(and yes, if you noticed we are putting family in front of work, instead of the other way around and it is intentional on our part).  It was our hope the article could help alleviate guilt for Working Mother Magazine readers.

The front cover announces, “Never feel Guilty again!” Attention grabbing yes, true? Probably not. Unproductive guilt is an emotional vampire, it’s the sort of guilt we experience that sucks the joy out of parenthood. And yes, we agree that is the sort of guilt we don’t need to keep around and entertain. However, we’ve always maintained  guilt is a valid emotion and is productive when is serves to remind us to get back on track  if we’ve really gone off the rails.  And who amongst us doesn’t make a mistake? Regardless if you ever feel guilty or not, it’s more than likely we can all agree–Nobody is perfect. Period.

The article is online,“The Anatomy of Guilt.” We would love for you to take a look at it and come back here for discussion.

Discussion:

While the article is well-written and well-sourced, we had expected the article to dig a bit deeper.  The time honored tradition of quoting experts  advising stressed out parents to “Just take a break” plays into the oversimplification of what it actually takes to decrease an incredibly active guilt-o-meter. What is missing from the piece, and really almost every article written on the topic of guilt, are the practical suggestions for how to take a break. Again, to be  fair, this isn’t a problem unique to the Working Mother Magazine article.  It happens a lot. In parenting classes, in family/work programs, in wellness workshops. You name it, someone is saying “Just give yourself a break” or “Don’t be so hard on yourself.”

And what happens if you don’t have any practical suggestions for doing either of those things? Gee, let’s guess? You feel even worse and even guiltier as you consider, “I just can’t take a break right now” or “I can’t afford a baby sitter” or “Why can’t I just stop being so hard on myself?”  See how it goes?  While “Just give yourself a break” and ‘Don’t be so hard on yourself” are offered as a way to reassure and give parents permission to ease up on themselves, it’s not the same thing as offering concrete ideas to parents who are stressed out and feeling like crap or have situations beyond their control they cannot help, such as having to work like a dog at their job (or even two jobs!) to afford three hots and a cot for their family.

Let’s come together as a community and talk about reality, how do we “take a break,” what will it take for us to “stop being so hard on ourselves?”

We’ll start it rolling with a few of our ideas, and some we’ve picked up from other places. We’d like you to continue the conversation in the comments.

  • Do your research. Check out competing companies and see if they have any family/work policies your own company might be able to adapt. If you walk into your supervisor’s office and say “Look what they are doing. Maybe we could do it too?” You might find your boss might actually go for it. If you don’t get a full “Green light GO!”, suggest trying it out for a trial period. If you never ask, how will you ever know if the possibility exists?
  • Are you overly connected? Disconnected? Get a grip on your PDA, Computer or Cell phone use.
  • Take pen to paper, or fingers to keyboard. Make a list of whatever is weighing on your mind. Is it not enough time with the kids? Bills piling up? Too much fast-food eating? Whatever it is write it down. Then separate the items into two columns, “I can control this” or “Not up to me.”  This process will allow you to actively consider where you are spending your emotional energy and if it’s being wasted or not.
  • Are you too self-critical? Snap out of it. Literally.  Wear a rubberband on your wrist and whenever you catch yourself with a negative thought, give the rubber band a little  snap.  (Devra used this method to stop biting her nails– as an adult!)

Now it’s your turn. Discuss the article, guilt inducing situations, suggestions to alleviate guilt…GO!

What happens when you can’t turn off the mommy guilt?

Wednesday, May 5th, 2010

Being huge proponents of decreasing anyone’s guilt-o-meter, it will come as no surprise Meagan Francis’ recent post  Is” mom-guilt” false guilt? is a post we want you to read. Meagan is a mom blogger , a professional colleague, a parenting book author, and a freelance journalist.  And in her spare time? She is mom to 5 kids. That’s right, 5.

After reading Meagan’s post, which we loved, we wanted in on this discussion. So, Meagan welcomed us onto her blog with open arms. We’ve got some tips for eradicating mommy guilt over at The Happiest Mom. Go over and get happy!

Chores are out. Helping is in. Does that make parents wimps?

Friday, March 26th, 2010

Recently Aviva was interviewed for this piece, written by Amy Hatch, over at ParentDish and the comments are and interesting read. Some took the word “tricks” in the title literally, as opposed to “tricks” meaning tips and then went off on it. Others commented they feel children have it too easy these days. They describe children as miscreants who aren’t held accountable to help at home while parents are serving as doormats for their overly entitled offspring. The amount of anger in some of the comments was disturbing to say the least. But is it true? Are parents letting our kids off easy when it comes to helping out around the ole homestead? Instead of trying to sweep everyone’s parenthood under the same generalization, let’s focus on ways you might try to encourage everyone to straighten up around the house, backbones included.

1. Define the word “Clean.” Too often we encounter frustrated parents who lament “My kid never cleans up his room.” and yet, when you ask the kid what’s going on, the kid says, “I did clean up my room.” The issue isn’t that the room is dirty, the problem is the parent and child aren’t on the same page as to what it means to have a clean room. Is clean all clothes put away in drawers or is clean that the bed is made or both? Be specific.

2. Pay or Play Whether you choose to pay your child to help around the house or not is up to you. There are reasonable arguments for doing so, such as teaching them how to handle money, and there are reasonable arguments against which center on the idea helping at home is what is expected when you are a member of a family. Whether you choose one or the other, pay or play is a commodity which can be traded, bartered or removed. Let your child know exactly what the consequence will be for skipping out on a task. i.e. Docking of allowance, friends don’t come over as planned, etc.

3. Write it down Our lives are busy these days. It is fairly easy to forget who is supposed to be doing what and whether any of it got done. Many elementary school kids are given an agenda book for homework. There is no law that states you can’t write in what their household responsibilities are for that week too. If your kid can write down their own homework assignments then they can also write down their own home work assignments. If your child doesn’t have to keep a calender for school, add one to your home in a central location or print one out on the computer and everyone gets a copy.

4. Be positive This doesn’t mean you have to blow sunshine up anyone’s ass to get them to do what needs to be done. Don’t confuse being positive with being passive. While “chore” is a word that has been used for decades, maybe one of the reasons kids hate doing “chores” is the word itself is a turn off. Experiment with different labels and see if you get a different response-Task, help, responsibility, all can substitute for “chore.” But whatever you choose to call it, make sure you tell your kids you noticed the task has been completed and smile. Kids are hardwired to please their parents, let your kids know when they’ve hit that target with you.

5. Keep it real by asking yourself some questions. Try to think back on what motivated you as a kid. Did it work? Did it backfire? Why? How are your kids the same or different? Is one of your kids motivated by pay while the other play?

6. No bribing. Don’t allow extortion either. In the real world you get arrested for that crap. Helping at home is a requirement when living at home. Yes, it’s that simple.

7. Get a whistle Instead of yelling for your kids to clean up, blow a whistle. Gets their attention without a voice having to be raised. Hell, it works for coaches on the teams, why not have it work at home too!

8. Stick to the plan Now that terms have been defined and consequences are clear, be consistent. Again, if you have to write it all down, do it. It’s hard for a kid to deny the writing on the wall, especially if it is actually written down on a piece of paper and affixed to the wall.

On Being Facebook Smart

Sunday, December 20th, 2009

Last December when our son turned thirteen I asked him if he would like to open his very own Facebook account. He told me he wasn’t interested. Life went on. A few months later we visited friends who lived in a land far far away Kansas. When we returned from the trip my son told me he would like to take me up on my offer and he wanted to start using Facebook. During our sojourn to the Wild Wild Midwest he had reconnected with his friends and now wished to hang out with them on Facebook. I was cool with it. After all Facebook is way less expensive than airplane tickets to Wichita.

As we sat in front of the computer going through the steps to set up his account, I explained the rules of engagement as they relate to the responsibility of having a Facebook account. We’d already had a discussion about online safety when he first ventured online. When he got a cell phone which included a camera, we had a talk about cell phone photography versus cell phone pornography, much like what SoCal Mom discussed with her daughter.

My rules were simple:

1. You must friend me. Not because I am lonely, if you’ve noticed I have over 500 of my own friends, you need to friend me if you want to be on Facebook.

2. I must know your password. Granted I will also have to write it down and I promise not to show it to your little brother. but you still need to give it to me. If you change it, you must give me the new one. And again, I will not share that information with your brother.

3. For my part, I promise not to abuse my power. I will not sign into your account without your knowledge. I will not change anything on your wall or profile without discussing it with you first. However, there could be a situation where I need to act quickly, and I reserve the right to do that, again, I will not abuse my power.

4. Believe me, I know your friends will use language I prefer you not use. As long as you know what I expect from you, we’re good to go. After all, I had friends in middle school and highschool who wound up behind bars, but did I? No. Make good choices. offline and online.

With teens I tend to lean toward the “less is more” when it comes to words, yet at the same time I make sure I’m packing plenty of information in what I do say. But even so, I knew there would come a time when I might have to step in and provide more guidance. After all, as parents it is difficult, albeit almost impossible, to anticipate every situation and how our child will respond. Thinking Mother brings up an excellent point in her post, when she addresses whether or not children understand the ramification of their actions online. Kids will make mistakes. My son did. It wasn’t a very serious one, but it provided a backdrop for an important life lesson.

My son plays soccer and he had been approached by another team’s coach. The coach had made the suggestion that my son should try out for that coach’s team. My son was very flattered. He was excited to have been asked but at the same time had no plan to take that coach up on his offer. My son is very happy on his current team. But that night my son updated his status to say “I was asked to try out for another travel soccer team.”

Within seconds I saw the update and called my son into my office (I work from home, he didn’t have to hop the metro). “Hey, do you realize you’ve got your coach’s son as a Facebook friend? What do you think he’s going to think when he reads your update?” My son looked at me for a moment, his face flushed and said, “That I’m going to leave the team. Uh oh. I need to fix that!” So I showed him how to delete his status and we had a brief conversation about whether or not he should send a message to the coach’s son. In a matter of seconds the decision was removed from him because I received an email from the coach asking “Is your son leaving our team?” My son sent an email to his coach and explained how the misunderstanding had happened, all because of a quickly written Facebook update based upon a situation only my son experienced.

Lesson learned. No need to have knee jerk response and ban him from the Interwebs until he moves out of the house. Instead I let him clean up his own mess, while offering support and consultation as needed.

No lie, it’s dififcult for many of us not to swoop in, hit the delete button, the off switch or the mute feature. Need inspiration to keep the brakes on? Check out what AMoore has to offer. Look, parenting is tough in these high tech times, but if you’re going to suck in your breath, let me give you a pointer; If you’ve never used Lamaze, it will come in handy during the teen years. Breathe with me. Heeeee heeeee whoooooo heeeee heeeee whoooooo.

The Family Connections Group is BlogHer’s community journalism project. I am a Contributing Editor for Family Connections/Digital Parenting

Parentopia Prop: Helena Oliviero Atlanta-Journal Constitution

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

As part of my job as a Contributing Editor at BlogHer.com I write about Digital Parenting. While many parents have ventured into the land of social media and making connections online, the idea of having kids doing the same makes a lot of folks nervous. It doesn’t help when we’ve got a majority of mainstream media focusing on fear mongering and shaming their readership.

Seriously, it is insulting and patently ridiculous. We don’t need this in our lives. Parenting presents enough challenges, we need information from our media, not finger wagging and navel gazing.

So when I was interviewed by Helena Oliviero from the Atlanta-Journal Constitution for her piece Parents Balance Freedom, Safety On Facebook I wasn’t sure how my quotes would wind up or how the piece would come together. Which isn’t at all unusual whenever anyone agrees to be interviewed. Unless you know the reporter personally, it’s almost always a crap shoot.

Not to say reporters are the main problem, I don’t believe they are, after all their are editors, producers and quite a few others who have their eyes on a pitch or piece before it is approved, put to bed and hits the stands or airwaves. I’m not dumping on journalists, I know many hardworking journos and for the most part they are the ones who want to do their job well, but at the same time, papers are losing money and those holding onto the purse strings are panicking. It’s a trickle down effect. And when stories go bad, it is often the journalist who finds themselves on the hot seat and not positioned to thrown an editor or producer under the bus. With the current revolving doors at many of the newspapers and magazines, keeping one’s job right now is outweighing quite a bit in my opinion. And understandably so. But last week I had a glimmer of hope that things may be coming back around…

When the AJC article came out last week, I yelped. I did. ’twas a yelp of joy. Finally a piece written in a major newspaper about a touchy topic that did not position parents as inept and offered pertinent and practical information to parents in a positive reporting style!

I’m holding up this piece as a model for others to read and emulate. This is what journalism is meant to do folks, find facts, report em and inform the public. Regardless of whether my quote had made it into this piece, I would still be singing it’s praises.

And for this, Helena Oliviero is completely deserving of a Parentopia Prop!

How ’bout a helping of brains with your turkey?

Wednesday, November 25th, 2009

A week or so ago my husband and I joined our younger son at his elementary school for a Thanksgiving lunch in the school cafeteria. We’ve had two children attend this elementary school and the Thanksgiving lunch is something we’ve done in years past. Only this year it was different.
As the three of us arrived at our table and sat down one of my son’s classmates burst into tears. He was seated next to me, I asked him what was up. “My parents aren’t here!” Okay, no problem. “I’ll go check and see if they are signed up for the lunch,” I told him as I got up and made my way to the sign-in table in the school’s foyer.
Arriving at the table I inquired if this particular student’s parents, or any other person, had signed up for the lunch. I gave the students name to the woman at the table. “No, they aren’t signed up.” Okay. No problem. We’ll just take him under our wing for the lunch. It’ll be fine. I was about to turn from the table, but this woman wasn’t done, “To be PC, his parents don’t come to things.” Huh? I was puzzled. I stared blankly. The woman tried again, “To be PC, his parents aren’t the type of people to come to things in the middle of the day.” Again I stared at her, turned my gaze to the teacher seated beside her and said “Our family will include him with us and we’ll get through it. I’ll also let his teacher know he was upset.”

I came back to the table and explained to the boy that his parents had not signed up for the lunch and unlike school where each day has the same schedule, grownups may have different things going on every day. Sometimes grownups work far away from home or a meeting pops up. The boy told me his parents professions and I explained that both of those jobs have a great deal of responsibility, but don’t have a lot of flexibility to adjust for leaving work in the middle of the day. No one at our table pretended not to notice his parents weren’t there, but at the same time no one created an environment of questioning their absence either.

As we ate, we discussed the type of work we do, what his parents do, are we all staying in town or going away for Thanksgiving weekend, and how the hell did I luck out getting a double helping of green beans instead of the mashed potatoes. A side dish everyone agreed could easily be served in the art room for papier-mache projects.

After lunch I hopped in my car and called Aviva. I told her about the experience at the school and how baffled I was regarding the remark that woman had made to me in reference to the classmate’s parents. “Why on earth would she preface it with ‘To be PC about it…’ What was that all about?” Aviva knowingly replied, “Well, you know. His parents might be nocturnal and she didn’t want to say it.”
I considered this for a moment, “Oh shit. I bet you’re right. His parents must be vampires.” Aviva continued, “Do you have a lot of undead at your son’s school?” I racked my brain trying to think if we did. “No. I think they may be the only ones.” I paused. Then it hit me, “OMG! Vampires, of course! Now it makes sense! That poor woman was just trying to figure out a nice way to let me know that boy is adopted or a foster child. I mean, he must be. Otherwise he’d definitely be home-schooled in the evenings.”
I wish I had made that connection earlier. There’s nothing wrong with being a Vampire. In fact, creatures of the night are really “in” right now. I would have explained I am actually a Zombie, as is my husband, and while we mainly roam the earth at night, we have the option of also walking among the living during daylight hours. Something Vampires just can’t do safely. Being Zombies, we’re already dead, so it’s just a different life (or death) circumstance. Then I could have asked for a helping of brains instead of more beans.
It’s not PC to categorize anyone as a monster for missing an event at school-day or night- regardless of the reason. Instead, let’s focus on being compassionate when a child says they miss their mummy, daddy or anyone else.

We’re all living in an era of trying to be superhuman, we shouldn’t be afraid to help each other out when we see the signal is shining. There may come a time when you might have to leap tall buildings in a single bound, miss the Thanksgiving lunch and hope another hero will be on hand to swoop in and save the day.

And with that, my work here is done.
Happy Thanksgiving!
Pictured Laurel Smith and a nameless flightless bird. Photo Credit: Laurel Smith, www.momsminivan.com

Is Shouting the New Spanking? IS IT? WELL?

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

Update! I will be part of a panel discussion today at 12:30 EST on MSNBC’s Dr. Nancy Snyderman Show. As I said on Twitter and Facebook, I am trying not to worry about a wardrobe malfunction. Although MochaMomma urged me to “PLEASE have a wardrobe malfunction, a planned one.” Gotta admit, it’s tempting. Too bad I don’t have extra pasties from BlogHer ’06. I hope you’ll tune in and send me “Don’t say stupid shit on national television” vibes!

The article written by Hilary Stout, For Some Parents Shouting Is The New Spanking appeared in the New York Times Styles section today and Aviva is quoted. Our post with more on the story, plus response to over 300 questions, concerns and observations found in the article’s comments,will be up sometime over the weekend.

Oh, and don’t think for a minute that it escaped our attention both photos included in the piece are of mothers yelling at their kids. Sure our book is called “Mommy Guilt” but this doesn’t mean we support the notion mothers should just sit back,take the heat and wind up sticking our collective head in the oven whenever we admit we’re experiencing tough times in the Parent-hood. We all know Dads yell too. And no doubt there are fathers who feel guilty about it. Parenting is not about perfection. Learning to be a more effective parent isn’t the same thing as learning to be skilled glass blower. Glass doesn’t have an ability to talk back, challenge, or call you “the meanest parent in the world.” We’re not parenting inanimate objects and we’re human too.

(and on a separate note, this is the first time I have ever written a post, hit “spell check” and got a “No misspellings found” message. It’s monumental. It is.)