photo by Sandra Dodd, of a picture in a charity shop in Surrey
Monday, December 9, 2013
Patient and kind
photo by Sandra Dodd, of a picture in a charity shop in Surrey
Sunday, December 8, 2013
Gentle, patient and generous
We make choices ALL the time. Learning to make better ones in small little ways, immediate ways, makes life bigger and better. Choosing to be gentle with a child, and patient with ourselves, and generous in ways we think might not even show makes our children more gentle, patient and generous.
photo by Colleen Prieto
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Saturday, December 7, 2013
Fond remembrance
Be grateful for that memory.
The next moment might be easier.
photo by Sandra Dodd, of Holly Dodd in Florida, in warm sunshine
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Friday, December 6, 2013
Life becomes easier
If your child is more important than your vision of your child, life becomes easier.
photo by Sandra Dodd
Thursday, December 5, 2013
Happy mom
A mom was worried about intellectualizing too much, and not being fully present with her young child. I wrote:
Nobody's still and at kid-speed all the time. But if you can figure out how to do it sometimes, then you can choose to do it, or choose to go faster, but to bring him along in a happy way.
Instead of saying "Come on, let's go!" maybe you could have picked him up and twirled him around and said something sweet and by the time he knows it he's fifty yards from there, but happy to be with his happy mom.
photo by Sandra Dodd
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Wednesday, December 4, 2013
The wrong window!
—Karen James
Plants vs. Zombies image by Sandra Dodd
(my gameplay, too)
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Tuesday, December 3, 2013
Don't taint the ice cream
It creates a trap, a trick question, an adversarial relationship, an opportunity for failure, if there is "a right answer" to the question "What do you want to eat?" Or if an overjoyed "can I have some ice cream?" is met with a sigh, and eyes rolling, and another sigh, and a dirty look, and a summary of what the child has already eaten that day, and a reminder of when the next meal is, and a head shake, and a mention of ingredients... or even ONE of those, it taints the ice cream. It harms the relationship. It makes the child smaller. It does not, correspondingly, though, make the parent larger.
photo by Sandra Dodd
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