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Raising Needham

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Raising Needham

Excuse Me Where Are Your Manners

It seems like teaching children manners has taken a back seat to almost everything but the eye rolling ends today.

I am a fun Mom. Really, ask anyone. Ask my kids, my husband and my friends. I love having fun, pushing the routine from time to time and a good belly laugh makes my day. But when it comes down to manners even a fun Mom has to be shown a little respect. I think it hit me when my kids started karate a few weeks ago and even Sensei Diana demanded a little respect. She would not accept yeah as a child’s answer when asked a question. She requested eye contact, a calm body and a proper hello and goodbye. I like Sensei Diana! Boy those kids listened, and listened happily. I decided then, and after a brief Facebook conversation I had with a few fellow Moms, to renew my quest for good manners. It’s always been important to me but somehow I had …

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Raising Needham

Should Allowance Be Allowed

Getting paid for doing everyday tasks around the house has become the norm but shouldn’t kids do these things as part of their daily responsibilities?

I’m old school. I’m stubborn and I don’t follow trends when it comes to parenting. We don’t watch TV during the school week, we don’t sit on the computer and play mindless games and there are no hats, cell phones or bad manners at our dinner table. So when my friends started asking me how much allowance I give my elementary school aged children I laughed, out loud. Why in the world would I pay my children to do the things needed to sustain the house they live in? I did some research on the topic and it turns out, much to my surprise that there are a host of “professionals” that believe children should be paid, for example, 50 cents per week for each year of age. In this scenario my 7-year-old would get $3.50 per week. Others have suggested…

Heather

11:53 am on Wednesday, January 9, 2013

In our home, allowance wasn't for doing the chores. It was so that the kids didn't have to rely on my whims when begging for gum, etc. and it got rid of the "gimmes" at the store. I gave my kids five dollars a week (three to spend, one for charity and one to save for long-term things like gifts to each other). They could spend the $3 on incidental things like gum, nail polish, ice cream treat, …   more ›

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

Raising Needham

Resolutions Parents Can Actually Keep

The New Year brings new hopes and challenges but a host of resolutions we don’t usually keep.

Let’s just put it out there shall we? We don’t keep our New Year’s resolutions. We mean well but those grand thoughts of ditching the holiday weight and curbing our TV watching usually fall by the way side just weeks into the first month. Not this year! I am making resolutions that I can actually keep. What’s my secret you ask, simplicity. No need to set yourself up for failure. Make some resolutions that are actually attainable. Here are some off my parenting list: So that is where I am this first week of the New Year. I am trying to make more realistic plans for the next year and with some adjustments along the way and think I can make them stick. Now that my parenting goals are done it is time to move on to my personal goals. That list …

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Raising Needham

It's Better to Give Than Receive

Keeping children focused on the real meaning of the holiday season can be hard but it’s worth the effort.

If I hear my children ask when they can open the gifts already under our tree one more time I promise you mine will be the house you pass with all of their gifts thrown on the front yard. Oh and crying children standing on the front porch. No, no, I wouldn’t really do that but some days I day dream about it. Some days I want to ban presents all together and just stand around the piano as my daughter plays Christmas carols and my son dances about. Keeping children focused on the real meaning of Christmas is hard. Thankfully I am determined and after watching How The Grinch Stole Christmas at least 45 times, my kids can now recite the end when that green cat like creature with a heart two sizes too small declares, “Christmas doesn't come …

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Raising Needham

The Secrets of Success of an Interfaith Family

Being an interfaith family has its challenges but in the end the rewards outweigh them all.

This is the time of year that I get the most questions about life as an interfaith family. They are all good, honest questions so I never mind sharing how we do things. To be honest, when I met my husband over ten years ago our different faith backgrounds didn’t cause us to skip a beat. One reason may be that we have both experienced “the other side” so we were no strangers to each other’s holidays, traditions and culture. One of my dearest friends and neighbor growing up is Jewish and I swear I spent as much time at her Temple as I did at my church. I loved the rituals, the stories, the kind Rabbi’s who always welcomed me. And to be clear, my husband jokes that he is “Jew-ish” and I don’t pretend to be a role model for the Presbyterian …

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Raising Needham

Raising Needham: Has The Grinch Already Stolen Christmas?

In the hustle and bustle of the holiday season, it’s easy to forget the child in us that believes.

  I'll admit it took me a little longer than usual to get in the holiday spirit this year. I am sure it has something to do with the broken foot I have been nursing since Columbus Day. Fall is an incredibly busy time of year for everyone, but try adding in two birthdays, a husband’s crazy work schedule and the insane idea of hosting Thanksgiving and then you have a superstorm that doesn’t allow for putting your foot up on ice. But I digress. Getting into the holiday spirit is usually fairly easy when you have kids. You just can’t help but look at things through their eyes and go a little crazy with nostalgia. I’ve been known to spend an entire day looking for the traditional Advent calendars with chocolates behind each window. My Oma used …

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Raising Needham

The Benefits of Board Games

A timeless family tradition has made its way back into the family room but do board games make kids smarter?

I haven’t always liked board games but now that I am older and wiser I know it is because my three older brothers always been the pants off me at most any game we played. My Dad was about the only one who “let” me win from time to time. Now that I have kids we have really gotten into the spirit of board games, I look for games that teach them something no matter how small. Recently I discovered that with a little coaxing most any board game can be a learning experience for kids. Very quickly I saw how board games helped both kids learn about taking turns. My youngest was about three when we started playing after dinner each night and he wanted to go first all of the time. We told him if he wanted to play we would rotate who goes first. …

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Raising Needham

Raising Needham: Thanksgiving Has Gone to the Kids

This Thanksgiving, I have decided to let the kids rule and sit back and enjoy the ride.

  I am hosting Thanksgiving this year and couldn’t be happier about it. Mainly because I get to see my family, but also because we don’t have to endure the busiest travel day of the year via planes, trains and automobiles. I will be sure to remember that when my brothers show up with their families looking tired and defeated. The prospect of my sister-in-law's delicious cooking and a few rounds of ping-pong (family tradition) will surly cure what ails them. But I think the best part about this Thanksgiving will be my “let the kids take over” mentality. I feel like my kids are finally old enough, along with their cousins, to really get involved. I started right after Halloween with a great Magic Tree House Fact Tracker book simply called …

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Raising Needham

Parenting: Voting with the Kids

Election Day is a great opportunity to teach your kids about the importance of the voting process.

I would love to rename Election Day "Freedom Day." I think more people would vote if they could remember or in some cases even know what it took and what we lost in order to secure our democracy. I guess you can tell by my tone that I have always been fascinated by politics. Yes, it can get ugly—especially in a presidential race—but cut through all of that nonsense and you get to the core of what Election Day is really about: our freedom to decide who runs our country. My gather was born in Germany and never ever took his right to vote in the United States for granted. He was incredibly proud to be an American citizen and passionate about his right to vote. We all learned at a very young age what a privilege it is to vote. I went to the …

Elizabeth H.

6:56 pm on Tuesday, November 6, 2012

I would also encourage you to educate your children about all the other offices that are on the ballot, as well as the other elections that occur during the year. When my children were young and I brought them to the polls, I also brought them when I voted in the Town Election in April and explained the importance of that election.   more ›

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Raising Needham

Raising Needham: The Joys of a Good Old-Fashioned Block Party

Getting to know your neighbors is as easy as throwing a party.

When we moved into our new home a year ago, I was thrilled. Great town, great schools, great next-door neighbors. Life was good. I did, however, begin to miss living in a traditional neighborhood. We live on a busy street, and while I do like the constant hustle and bustle of that, I worried we wouldn’t get to know our extended neighbors. I chalked it up to one of the few things I would have to give up to live in our new house. It could be worse. Life was moving along fairly well and we had a great relationship with our next-door neighbors from day one. Soon, new neighbors moved in behind us and we started enjoying playing with their son, sharing a glass of wine and just hanging out. Then I was introduced to another family on the other …

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