Dec 1, 2016

I’m Worried a Second Kid Will Break Us

Nicholas & Vector, Early November 2016
Image Source: Christopher Dale

This past March, my wife and I, both 37, welcomed our first child, Nicholas.

We had approached parenthood with the wariness of a career-oriented couple who, over eight years of marriage, had built a wonderfully reliable work/life balance — a comfortably predictable lifestyle that, as my wife’s belly grew bigger, suddenly had a ticking time bomb strapped to it.

No more picking up and leaving at a moment’s notice. No more impromptu after-work plans. No more eight (or even six) hours of sleep.

Seven months later, those worries seem silly.

For starters, we lucked out: Nicholas is a “good baby” by anyone’s measure. With few exceptions, his cries mean one of three things: he’s hungry, he’s tired, or his diaper is messy. Fix the issue, stop the crying. At 4 months, he was either sleeping through the night or waking up just once. We had braced for a Category 5 hurricane, but instead we got a light breeze with scattered showers.

He’s also particularly cute — an assessment drawn from the admiring gushings of family and friends, rather than my understandably biased opinion. Some infants look like aliens; Nicholas looks like a Gerber Baby candidate. He has my wife’s nose (which is small), my eyelashes (which are long), and neither of our eyes (ours are tiny and sharp, his rounded and gentle). Three for three, and that’s only his face.

Image Source: Christopher Dale
Image Source: Christopher Dale

Of course, Nicholas’s very arrival meant a huge lifestyle change, since the constant attention a baby requires is something most new __parents aren’t used to. Babies bring a heightened sense of responsibility; whether cooing or crying, there’s no getting around that.

Still, for two people who rather reluctantly dragged themselves into parenthood, Nicholas was the perfect first baby. He’s given us all the joys of parenthood with the bare minimum of its most aggravating, exhausting inconveniences.

But now, as Nicholas approaches 9 months and my wife and I near the not-so-young age of 38, an elephant-sized question has officially entered the room: Will Nicholas be a big brother, or are we one and done?

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Once smitten, twice shy

Deciding whether you want a second child is entirely different than the decision-making process that leads to your firstborn. The first is a prerequisite for parenthood: We don’t get to be __parents without having at least one child. That said, “Do we want to be parents at all?” is a question far removed from, “Do we want to be parents … again?”

I think my wife and I had assumed that the matter would be resolved naturally, with time. We’d settle into a frenzied yet gratifying life with Nicholas, adapt to the new normal of being a family unit rather than a couple and, sooner or later, the decision of whether to give Nicholas a sibling would become, somehow and suddenly, obvious.

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In doing so, I think we were subconsciously asking ourselves whether or not we make good parents. We were withholding an opinion on a second child until we could reflect on our experiences with the first. We had to separate the hype of being a parent from the reality of the daily parenting grind before considering a repeat performance. If the first went well, the second would seem like a given, right?

Wrong.

Now that we’ve officially joined the mommy and daddy ranks, our hesitancy to have a second child far outweighs our worries about the first. We’ve already seen what parenthood is like and, despite rave reviews, we’re not sold on a sequel yet. But why?

From overjoyed to overwhelmed

It seems practical that, if a couple can handle one child with relative ease, a second shouldn’t overwhelm them. Experience raising your firstborn would make the next less surprising, more intuitive. Not easy, but easier. And besides, we already have all these clothes, these toys, this stuff. We’ve already nested … so what’s one more hatchling?

It was our friends who first gave us pause. My wife and I are close with a couple we consider the epitome of maturity. They are grounded, capable people in a solid marriage. You’d figure they’d make fantastic parents, and you’re right — they do.

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They took the leap before we did. Their oldest is now a toddler, and the logical yet loving way they co-parented him added to our mental picture of what positive parenting looks like as my wife’s due date approached — coincidentally, around the same time their second child was due.

Shortly thereafter, our friends’ effortless facades began to crack. Juggling two careers and two young kids was stretching two high-functioning adults too thin. I ran into one of them on my commute one morning, and he looked like he’d been hit by a train rather than riding on one.

If it were two less well-put-together people, my wife and I could shrug off our friends’ second-child struggles as a lack of organization, instincts, or savvy. But the esteem in which we hold these two people make their utter exhaustion utterly intimidating.

The more tangible issues surrounding a potential second child — financial (“Are we OK on money?”), spatial (“Do we need a bigger house?”), physical (“Can I endure even less free time, disposable energy, sleep?”) — seem simpler to resolve. And after initially being blown off balance, our friends seem to be re-approaching a workable equilibrium as a family of four.

Still, we have our reservations. As much as we’d like Nicholas to have a built-in playmate, is that reason enough to risk going from overjoyed to overwhelmed? We don’t want to look back with regret at not having a second child but, on the contrary, we don’t want to look back with resentment at having another child simply because it seemed the conventional next step.

It’s a big decision and, for us, remains unresolved. After all, parenting is the ultimate “to be continued.”

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This Nursing Home Teamed up with a Local Animal Shelter to Save Orphaned Kittens

We already know our society loves to obsess over sweet kittens on Instagram and we’ve certainly watched our fair share of cat videos, but it’s this movement to save kitties that have a low chance of survival that’s warming our hearts today.

There is a love fest happening between elderly residents of Catalina Springs Memory Care facility and orphaned kittens from Pima Animal Care Center — and it’s just the thing everyone needs to cheer up.

What many people may not know is that kittens who aren’t weaned from their mothers before being separated have a very low chance of survival. It is typically up to the mother cat to wean the kittens, but when a kitten is abandoned they run into trouble.

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According to Pets Web MD, “The weaning process typically takes between four and six weeks, with most kittens completely weaned by the time they’re eight to ten weeks old.” Additionally, if a kitten is removed from their mother too soon it can have a “negative effect on the kittens’ health and socialization skills.” You can imagine how difficult it would be for an orphaned kitten to survive without assistance during this crucial weaning period. To combat this issue, the Arizona animal shelter has teamed up with their local assisted living facility to help take care of the kittens.

Rebecca Hamilton, Catalina Springs’ health service director, was the brains behind this collaboration. She thought that teaming up the helpless animals with the residents of the care home would both help the kittens stay alive and give the residents something to care for (and of course garner a few smiles, because kittens!).

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Sharon Mercer, who is the Catalina Springs Memory Care Executive Director, explained:

“To some it may seem peculiar at first: Residents who are in need of around-the-clock care themselves, given the task to care for these young kittens, but there are skills, emotions and needs that do not just leave a person with dementia or Alzheimer’s. The desire to give love and receive love remains. The kittens have given us the opportunity to nurture this human condition that lies in each and every one of our residents.”

The first two kittens to participate in the program are adorably named Peaches and Turtle. When they arrived at Catalina Springs in October they only weighed a mere 7 ounces and needed round-the-clock attention. It’s been about a month since their arrival and they’ve already doubled in size! We have no doubt it’s thanks to all the cuddles and loving their receiving from their new friends at the care home.

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It has been noted that soon Peaches and Turtle will be ready to return to Pima Animal Care to be spayed and adopted out. One of the nurses from Catalina Springs actually fell in love with one of the little guys and has already submitted an adoption application! Who wouldn’t want one of these cuties?

Thanks to thoughtful programs like this, many more kittens will have the chance to get the care they need and go on to become loving family pets.

h/t: Hello Giggles

The Fresh Hell That Is Cooking for Kids

It seems unbelievable to me now, but for a brief period in my twenties, I considered going to culinary school. I was watching a little too much Food Network back then, though you couldn’t blame me. Those were the halcyon days of the network, before it became Guy Fieri’s screaming inferno, serving up nightly bowls of mediocrity drizzled with Sriracha mayo and Julia Child’s tears.

Back then, the shows were instructional and the hosts were mostly trained chefs. Mario Batali taught me how to make pasta from scratch. Sara Moulton taught me knife skills. Ina Garten taught me how to satisfy a nerd named Jeffrey. All those skills proved to be invaluable (if you’re reading this, Jeffrey, I know you’d agree).

Those were halcyon days for me, as well — I was newly married, living in a hip downtown Chicago loft, and a stone’s throw from some of the best restaurants in the country. I didn’t cook because I needed to; I cooked because dinners were culinary adventures.

“What should we have tonight? Spicy Thai curry or grilled Neopolitan eggplant?” I might ask my husband. Oh, the intoxicating freedom of it all! We could visit entire countries and never leave our kitchen!

“You’ve always wanted to go to Morocco? Me too! Let’s make a tagine!”

“You’ve always wanted to start a family? Me too! Let’s make more people to swoon over my meals!”

I was so. very. stupid.

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Today, my cooking life goes a little differently. Each week, I plan and prepare around 17 meals for a family of five that includes the following: a self-appointed pescatarian tween (if you’re not familiar with that term, a pescatarian is a vegetarian who will eat fish), a husband with a fish allergy (do you see the problem here?), two nut allergies, and a picky 5-year-old who exists on dried cereal and one specific brand of fluorescent mac and cheese.

My family has so many dietary requirements, I joke that feeding them is like cooking in a hospital ward. But that’s not quite accurate — if I were a hospital cook, I’d enjoy the camaraderie of the kitchen crew (in my mind’s eye, they’d be a salty yet big-hearted group), not to mention a paycheck.

Instead, my dinner prep feels more like cooking in a jail; one where I’m the prisoner. At least this prisoner’s allowed to drink wine.

Sadly, my options are few. Our town has limited take-out offerings, and it’s hard to find a meal delivery service that can account for all of my family’s food issues. My husband walks in the door from work just in time for dinner, if we’re lucky. Since I write from home, cooking for my family is my job by default. If I quit that job, children starve to death. The stakes are pretty high.

Sure, I can look on the bright side and see how cooking for my kids has taught me a lot about giving up control. It’s like that famous quote, “If you want to see God laugh, tell him about your plans.” Or in this case, “If you want to see God laugh, spend an hour making those Japanese meatballs that Gwyneth Paltrow’s kids devour but yours feed to the dog under the table.”

Maybe it’s time I finally started heeding the advice of famed pediatrician and notable sadist (I kid) Dr. William Sears, who thinks it’s time __parents stopped putting so much pressure on themselves when it comes to feeding children. The job of parents, he says on his website, is “simply to buy the right food and prepare it nutritiously … [then] leave the rest up to the kids. How much they eat, when they eat, and if they eat is their responsibility; we’ve learned to take neither the credit nor the blame.”

Sears is, of course, the man behind the infamous attachment parenting method, which he originally outlined in his seminal doorstop, er, parenting guide, The Baby Book.

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In my opinion, attachment parenting seems to suggest that mothers quit their jobs and dangle their offspring around their necks for two years after giving birth. So it’s a bit of an about-face to see Sears advocating hands-off parenting when it comes to food.

Did one too many nights of scraping untouched “carrot swords” and “egg canoes” into the garbage bin push him over the edge? I wonder …

Don’t worry, Dr. Sears. You’ve just figured out what the rest of us eventually did after reading The Baby Book: that it doesn’t mean you’re a bad parent if you can’t manage to feed your child the way society tells you to.

Ahem. That said, I find Sears’ mealtime advice to be remarkably sound. On my good nights, I try to remember it. On my bad nights, I serve my meals with a bitter side of mom guilt, reminding my family how impossible it is to cook for a pescatarian and a person with a fish allergy and a picky eater and — we know, we know, Mommy!

Then I lift my wine glass in silent solidarity to my imaginary hospital cooking crew, Big Lou and the gang. I may not have the rich culinary life I once did, but those gals always have my back.

11 Inspiring Children’s Books That Encourage Kids to Dream Big

Editor’s Note: Babble is a part of The Walt Disney Company. Also, Babble participates in affiliate commission programs, including with Amazon, which means that we receive a share of revenue from purchases you make from the links on this page.

If you were to ask most __parents what their greatest hopes are for their children, I’m sure most of them would say that they hope their children have the courage and determination to follow their dreams. It is certainly at the top of my list for my three little ones at home.

And although we will forever encourage our children to reach for the stars, we also want them to know that simply dreaming isn’t enough. Achieving a goal that you are passionate about also takes hard work, determination, and the willingness to try and fail (sometimes many times) on the way to making that dream a reality. These are things that kiddos need to learn, and books are a beautiful way to introduce them to these lessons.

I have curated a list of my favorite inspiring children’s books that encourage kids to pursue their dreams. All feature characters with unique stories — some based on real-life historical figures and others rooted in fiction. But in every case, there is a lesson to learn and a dreamer to be inspired by.

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Me … Jane

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On a Beam of Light

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The Tree Lady

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Dream Big, Princess!

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Put Me in the Story
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How to Catch a Star

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Ish

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Snowflake Bentley

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The Boy Who Loved Math

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Giraffes Can’t Dance

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Drum Dream Girl

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Ada Twist, Scientist

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1. Me … Jane | Patrick McDonnell

This illustrated story is about a young Jane Goodall — the world’s most well-known primatologist — who wants to dedicate her life to helping animals. It encourages children to set their sights on a goal and to go after it, unwaveringly.

2. On a Beam of Light | Jennifer Berne

This picture book follows the life of Albert Einstein. It shows that despite how different he was from other children, Einstein didn’t let anything deter him from continuing to wonder and question the world around him.

3. The Tree Lady | H. Joseph Hopkins

The Tree Lady tells the story of innovative trailblazer Kate Sessions (the first woman to graduate from UC Berkeley with a science degree) and her crusade to turn the dry desert of San Diego into a beautiful, green landscape.

4. Dream Big, Princess!

This is a personalized and interactive book that will put little ones right in the story with their favorite Disney Princesses. Children are encouraged to write, draw, and imagine all the things they can be, as they follow the Princesses in pursuit of their greatest dreams.

5. How to Catch a Star | Oliver Jeffers

Oliver Jeffers tells the tale of a young boy, a lover of stars, who decides he would like to catch one for himself. He comes up with a variety of plans, and one by one each approach fails. In the end he finds that the plans we have don’t always work out, and that the things we try to achieve sometimes happen in unexpected ways.

6. Ish | Peter H. Reynolds

Ish is about a young boy named Ramon who’s discouraged by his drawings that don’t look real. But he gradually gains confidence in his uniqueness — the “ish” in his drawings. This book shows kids that there is beauty in their unique abilities, and that achieving a dream looks different for each person.

7. Snowflake Bentley | Jacqueline Briggs Martin

This book is based on a true story about Wilson Bentley who loved snow more than anything in the world. Enamored by the fact that no two snowflakes are alike, he dreamed of capturing them on camera for others to see (no easy feat in the late 1800s).

8. The Boy Who Loved Math | Deborah Heiligman

In this tale, Paul Erdos, a boy who is a wiz with numbers, struggles with simple everyday tasks — like buttering his bread. Despite being a little bit different, Erdos blazes his own path to become a brilliant mathematician.

9. Giraffes Can’t Dance | Giles Andreae

A simple children’s story, Giraffes Can’t Dance is about a giraffe named Gerald who just wants to dance. He gets tripped up and the other animals tease him. In the end, Gerald learns that in order to achieve his dreams, he just needs to step outside the box and do his own thing. It’s a wonderful message to follow your heart and not let others get you down on the road to your dream.

10. Drum Dream Girl | Margarita Engle

Drum Dream Girl is inspired by Millo Castro Zaldarriaga, a Chinese-African-Cuban girl living in 1930s Havana who dreamed of playing the drums, but was told by her father that only boys should play. Millo didn’t give up, practicing until her music could be heard by all. It’s a perfect example for girls, of what it looks like to shatter glass ceilings and to never let anyone stop them from doing what they love.

11. Ada Twist, Scientist | Andrea Beaty

Author Andrea Beaty knows the importance of teaching kids to follow their passions, which is why her three picture books have quickly become beloved by children everywhere. Ada Twist, Scientist is her third, where we meet an endlessly curious scientist named Ada as she embarks on a search to find a very unpleasant smell. Author Beaty’s other great reads include Rosie Revere, Engineer and Iggy Peck, Architect.

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Store Owner Saw a Man Shoplifting Groceries for His Family, and What He Did Next Will Warm Your Heart

It’s natural to assume that when a store owner sees someone shoplifting from their store, they’d call the police and demand repayment. But when Sergio De Leon captured a shoplifter on his security camera, he didn’t turn the video over to the police. Instead, he offered to give the man more groceries for free.

De Leon owns a Mexican deli and grocery store in Spokane, Washington, called De Leon Foods. His store is shoplifted fairly often, he told KHQ News, so he recently installed security cameras. He said that beer is taken all the time, but that wasn’t the case in this instance. De Leon watched on the camera as a man walked out the back door without paying for essential groceries like milk and vegetables — which De Leon assumed were for his family.

Instead of trying to prosecute him for not paying, De Leon posted the security video on Facebook, offering help to the shoplifter.

“I see you took milk, tamales, and other groceries, which makes me think you have a family,” he wrote. “If you are in need, please come and see me and I will see that your family gets these groceries without you getting in trouble.”

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De Leon wanted to help the shoplifter, who he knew must be going through tough times. De Leon knows exactly what that’s like, as he grew up going to food banks with his family. Now, he has a successful store with his name on it, and he wants to offer help to those who are in need like he was.

“I kind of wanted to show this individual that there are places out there where he can go for help,” De Leon explained to KHQ News. “I think we can help him out also.”

His Facebook post has received a huge response since it was posted on Monday, with over 2.5k likes, 576 shares, and 165 comments. The positive messages keep pouring in, praising the generosity of this store owner.

“I’ve never shopped at your store before, but I will go out of my way to do so now because of the way you responded to this video,” Patty Marinos commented. “Theft is never acceptable, but your forgiving heart speaks volumes about the man that you are and how you run your business. Thank you.”

“A very generous and honorable offer on your part. It may just be the second chance this person needs. De Leon Foods will always have my business and respect. Feliz Navidad to you and your family,” wrote Elise Jamison.

“When you steal food it’s because you’re hungry or have children who are hungry,” Tammy Hullin commented. “Thank you for showing compassion when you could have been bitter and angry. This is why Spokane loves DeLeon’s.”

We love how De Leon chose kindness, when it would have been so easy to respond in anger. We could all use more compassion like this in the world today.

h/t: KHQ News

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I Have to Admit, I Thought Parenting Would Be More Rewarding

“I Have to Admit, I Thought Parenting Would Be More Rewarding” originally appeared on Medium and The Fatherly Forum, and was reprinted with permission.

Image Source: Thinkstock
Image Source: Thinkstock

Recently, I asked a newly married friend of mine if he was planning on having kids. It was a harmless question. One I assumed he would readily have an answer to, so it amused me when he twisted in his seat and stammered a bit before saying, “I know, I know, I should have kids because kids are rewarding.” He said that last part as if it had been beaten into his brain since his wedding reception.

He looked at me, clearly waiting for me to remind him of his civic duty to have children.

He was going to have to wait a long time for that.

I have a 5- and 7-year-old who push my buttons on a minute-by-minute basis, and I’m way too tired to talk anyone into parenting. If you don’t want kids, don’t have them. Everyone will be better off, except possibly the therapists who will have less clients as a result.

But, if you do want kids, then I think it’s critical to understand that having them may not be rewarding. Not in the sense that I think of rewarding, anyway.

To me, rewarding implies that if you work hard, remain committed  —  even in adverse conditions, at some point, you will experience a feeling of success. Even if it’s just because you’ve finished the task.

Having kids is not like that.

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No need to bore you with facts about how hard it is to have babies; exhaustion and sore nipples are well documented. I also think it’s pretty clear that there’s loads of sympathy given to new parents.

But what they don’t tell you is that very quickly, the compassion ride is over. Society expects you to stop using your kids to complain. Case in point: there’s a dad in my building who grumbles at our co-op meetings about dust from neighborhood construction sites and lobby safety, and when doing so, he refers to his 2-year-old (who can run and wears a bowler hat, mind you) as a newborn, and it makes me want to poke his eyes out.

Clearly he missed the memo that by your child’s second birthday, you’re no longer allowed to complain. You are expected to put a framed picture of your kid on your desk at work and tell no more than one story per week about how super cute your kid is. And that story better be hilarious and self-deprecating or folks will stop listening. Under no circumstance should this story be a real example of how hard parenting is.

If you think I’m wrong, think back to the last time you saw a real-life Facebook status like this:

“Today my son was a total asshole. He punched his sister 25 times. He screamed at me on the subway because I wouldn’t let him play Subway Surfers on my phone. He screamed louder because he knew we were trapped on the train. He finally calmed down. Then he farted. On me. And everyone stared at me for the duration of the ride because I smelled.”

People don’t talk about the pressure of trying to shape the mind of a little person so that they end up with good self-esteem and they also don’t think about pushing people onto a subway track.

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The sheer weight of that responsibility leaves me feeling as if I am always doing it wrong. And by it I mean everything. I see echoes of all my negative thoughts in my kids’ behavior, whether there is a correlation or not.

I try my best. I follow the experts’ advice. For example, when using the 1, 2, 3 technique I do not yell, “Jesus Christ! Stop pulling your brother’s pants down in front of that creepy old man or I’m throwing your ratty Barbie in the trash!”

Instead, I take the mandated deep breath and say, “If you want to keep your Barbie you will keep your hands to yourself.” And the first time I see my daughter’s tiny little hands go near her brother I say, “One!” in a low and authoritarian voice. By 2, she figures out I mean business and moves on.

So I win the great parent award for the night because I taught my kid boundaries and that there are repercussions for her actions. The next step is to go home, pour myself a large glass of wine, and take two sips before falling asleep holding my Kindle.

Wrong.

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Sure I will go home and pour the wine, but in the brief moments before I fall asleep (and also during the next 5 hours of dreams) I will torture myself, worrying that I just created a daughter who won’t stand up for herself and will be easily swayed by peer pressure.

To confuse matters more, my son is nearly unbreakable with 1, 2, 3. And when I look at him, I wonder if he will end up a wild man that has absolute disregard for rules and authority or if he will someday rule the world.

The answer is: I have no idea. And there’s no guarantee that I will be around long enough to see how it all turns out.

My stepmother was the same exact parent for both her kids. Her son, while a nice guy, ended up in prison because of drugs and her daughter ended up a successful CFO type. But she was killed (alongside her entire family) in a freak car accident.

I wonder if my stepmom feels parenting is rewarding?

But …

What I can say about parenting is this: It has pushed me beyond anything I thought I was capable of.

It expanded my capacity for love. I have never loved anything as much as I love my children.

It expanded my level of compassion. Of anger. Of hope. Of fear. Of joy. Of empathy. Of the need for control.

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I’m now like a walking bundle of feelings that live just below the surface of my skin. Just after my daughter was born, I was on a plane home from a work trip when we hit a serious pocket of turbulence, the kind where the plane drops then recovers in a frantic fashion for several minutes on end. At the first sign of trouble, I pulled my seat belt as tight as my stomach would allow, gripped the arm rests and proceeded to silently sob because an image of my wife holding my daughter’s hand popped into my head for just a second.

There’s just so much to lose now.

Parenting has pushed me to constantly question myself and say, “Was that the best I can do?” Often the answer is no, so I pick myself up, dust myself off and try again, and I’m a better person for it.

And on rare days, I get to see beautiful things. This summer I watched my 5-year-old son get off the swings at Coney Island, then run around to help all the other kids out of their swings. And one day at the playground, I looked on as my daughter saw her brother on the sidelines of a soccer game, sad because he wasn’t invited to play. She walked over, stopped the game, and told the boys that her brother wanted to play. The moment she said, “They said you could play!” and he hopped off the bench elated, I started to cry. Don’t worry, I pretended it was super dusty and there was something in the contacts that I don’t wear.

One might argue that those examples are the very definition of the word “rewarding.” And maybe they are.

Does that mean I’m wrong, and parenting is in fact rewarding?

I can’t say for sure because I don’t know how it’s all going to end.

More from Fatherly:

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  • 5 ways to ensure that new house you’re spending a fortune on is worth it

This British School Is Banning Kids from Raising Their Hands in Class, and Parents Aren’t Happy

Image Source: Thinkstock
Image Source: Thinkstock

A secondary school in Nottinghamshire, England, has officially banned the use of traditional hand-raising as a method for students to respond to a teacher’s questions. As The Telegraph reports, the school’s principal Barry Found feels strongly that this method of teaching is antiquated and “does not challenge and support the learning of all.”

The Telegraph obtained a letter the principal wrote earlier this week, which further explained the decision:

“From Monday, November 28, hands will only be raised in the academy to establish silence for listening (the students are very used to this practice and are brilliant at it.)

“We will use a variety of other techniques to ensure that every student is challenged and developed in class through our questioning and that every student has opportunities to contribute and participate.”

As a former educator myself, I can actually understand the criticisms of hand-raising, even if it still remains the traditional method of teacher-student interaction. It was originally established as a way to prevent kids from shouting out answers all at once. However, as many teachers know, often the same kids repeatedly raise their hands, sometimes with such earnestness that they are metaphorically shouting out the answer anyway. And other kids who are shy or less likely to draw attention to themselves may slink back into their seats, hoping to avoid attention.

I know, because I was one of those over-zealous kids. And I’m pretty sure my own kids are the first to shoot their hands in the air on a daily basis, too. However, any good teacher will look past the five hands waving in her face every time she asks a question and seek opportunities to draw quieter kids in. She may also tell certain students who’ve had several chances to respond that they need to take a break and not raise their hands for a period of time, giving shier kids a chance to shine.

Change itself is not a bad thing. And sometimes it is necessary, especially in education. In fact, I believe that one of the greatest disservices teachers do to their students is get stuck in their ways, and refuse to modify their practices as new kids come into the classroom. I am thankful practices such as corporal punishment are becoming less common in schools. I also see the value in differentiated instruction — something that was not standard practice years ago. So yes, change can be good.

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However, I do think this could have been approached differently. Certainly encouraging teachers to utilize other means of engaging students is effective. But rather than outright ban this practice, Principal Found could have asked teachers to curb their use of hand-raising and offer suggestions and/or training on other types of teaching. For example, kids may benefit from brainstorming in small groups, and coming up with and presenting an answer to a difficult question together. Or teachers can give students a heads-up that they will be calling on them at random with regards to a specific topic, so they have time to prepare. For some students, having a teacher call on them and demand an answer without warning can be terrifying. Hand-raising gives kids the choice of whether to answer or not.

Furthermore, as an educator I also cringe when I hear of sweeping school-wide changes implemented by a principal or superintendent. I wonder if the teachers were consulted before this decision was made. It is crucial for educators to maintain some semblance of autonomy in their classrooms. They know their kids and what works and what doesn’t. Also, most teachers do use a variety of methods to properly teach and assess student comprehension. For many, hand-raising is only one of those methods, so to outright ban it sends a negative message to teachers that they cannot be trusted to run their own classrooms, and it damages morale.

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As The Telegraph reports, critics of this decision include the National Union of Teachers (NUT), stating that a school-wide change like this is disrespectful to teachers. Michael McKeever, who was head of the Trinity School in Aspley, Nottingham, says this move is a “step backwards” and that good teachers ensure all kids are engaged in the lesson, regardless of who raises his/her hand.

Many __parents were also none too pleased by the new rule. As Lucinda King shared online: “My son told me about this last week and he is disappointed about it as he fears being chosen randomly if he doesn’t know the answer but equally won’t get the opportunity to raise his hand when he does know the answer. I guess it’s different for each child depending on their confidence levels.”

Another parent, Angela Osborne, added, “Unfortunately this school is getting more and more bizarre. When my eldest started I couldn’t praise the school enough — a kind caring atmosphere where the teachers really knew their students and were passionate about their progress and success.”

During my own teaching career, I taught at several high schools all over the United States. I will say that I was at my best when working under a supportive principal. When trusted to run my classroom as I saw fit, I was more motivated to work harder for my kids. When treated as untrustworthy and incapable of my own classroom management, I was angry and less inspired to go to work every day. Everyone wins — students and faculty alike — when a principal works alongside his teachers making school-wide decisions together.

An email was sent to Principal Found for comment, but a response has yet to be received.

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