Toddler Feeding Techniques – Don’t Watch Me

Another successful toddler feeding tip I have learnt is to not watch our child too much during a meal. For some reason our daughter will not eat when she is being overly watched and I can’t blame her. I don’t really like it either.

I try to make sure that I am preparing the family meal or doing other jobs in the kitchen while I am feeding her. That way she does not feel as if all the attention is on her and what she is eating and it also means that I am close in case she needs some assistance in the use of her knife and fork (or to scrape the food off the ceiling!).

Generally I will drop a small portion on her plate and then go back to what I was doing without checking to see if she will eat it. I am trying to give the impression that I don’t care if she eats it or not.

It might take a few minutes but eventually the food will casually be eaten whereby another piece will magically appear on the plate.

It does take a decent amount of time to get her to eat a full meal this way but as I am working in the kitchen anyway it is not as if I am wasting time.

She can take as long as she wants and as I am busy myself and not hanging over her head waiting for her to finish she doesn’t feel any pressure.

The only disadvantage I can see is that I don’t ever actually see the food get eaten but as I don’t find it on the floor or in her pockets and she seems to be growing well then there is only one place it could be going.

Can I watch you eat…?

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Child Care – Is It A Parents Job?

Doesn’t anyone want to look after their kids anymore?

Is it my imagination or is it now the norm to palm them off to child care as soon as we are able so we can get on with our own lives?

As a stay home Dad I fully know what a thankless, exhausting and alienating job full time parenting can be but does that mean we should give that responsibility to someone else?

I know that for some parents there really isn’t a lot of choice these days with the cost of living sky rocketing and the amount of money required to be part of the great Australian dream of home ownership means that two incomes are almost absolutely essential.

I also know that some parents really don’t want to be looking after kids all day. They have their lives and their careers and why should they give up what they like doing when you can call in the professionals?

Many people I meet are surprised when I tell them we have decided to keep our child at home with one of us until at least the age of three. “Why?” they ask, “when you could both be working and getting ahead?”

Getting financially ahead? My wife and I agree that we would happily sacrifice a little getting ahead to be able to spend some beautiful time with our growing little bundle. After all she is our child and the responsibility is ours and ours alone.

What I can’t understand is that the amount of money required to send a child to child care (up to $150 AUD per day per child) can in a lot of cases almost negate the income earned from the second parent working!

In other words, if the second income is solely for the purpose of sending your kids to child care then there seems to be little financial benefit for the consequence of spending less time with your little ones.

Grandparents’ houses are often used as pseudo child care centers and this can help with the financial burden as well as encouraging bonding but as it is in the nature of grandparents to spoil their grand kids, discipline can become a problem when the child is back in the family home.

The arguments for child care range from the benefits of social interaction i.e. kids spending time with other kids to getting them used to a structured day. I am sure that these things can also occur within the parameters of dedicated parenting. That’s what regular play groups, sporting and social activities are for.

Some also say that when your kids finally get to kindergarten (around age five) that the ones who had spent time in child care are more developed in terms of numeracy and literacy than the ones who didn’t.

There may be some truth in that except that a recent study showed that most kindergartens have a wide variance in these skills and the whole first year is dedicated to getting all the kids level for the beginning of year one when the serious learning starts!

Child care is a booming industry in Australia and I believe that the marketers of this industry have a lot to answer for by scaring parents into thinking that their kids will fall behind academically and socially if they do not get into child care as soon as possible.

While this philosophy may go a long way to easing the guilt of those parents who need or want to use child care there is simply no evidence to prove it is more beneficial for your child than dedicated parenting.

So…who wants my kid for the day?

This article was published on the Mamamia website and attracted a huge response. If you would like to read the 500 or so comments (mostly derogatory) then click here.

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Stay At Home Dad – Am I Becoming More Like A Woman?

Stay at home dadI read a recent study about how men who stay at home and look after their kids have increased levels of the female hormone estrogen in their body.

In other words the time they spend as a full time stay at home dad has measurable hormonal consequences.

It caused me to wonder…am I becoming more like a woman?

In addition my wife has introduced me to the health and environmental benefits of soy milk without telling me about the other studies that say that men who drink soy milk also have raised estrogen levels. Now I really am starting to worry.

It’s not as if my hormonal balance was tipped massively in favour of testosterone to begin with anyway. My wife and I have always joked that my “metrosexualism” and domestic tendencies may cause people to wonder about my sexual preferences. No one can iron a shirt or fluff a cushion like I can.

My saving grace is that I am married with a child so that should manage to hold off the doubters for a little while longer. Not that there is anything wrong with that.

Now that I am a full time stay at home dad who drinks soy milk I now have the double estrogen whammy. Holy crap! No wonder I found the women’s conversations at a party last weekend much more interesting than the men’s.

On top of that I now need to carry a small “man bag” to hold all the extra baby stuff and I have swapped the car and sport magazines for Modern Recipes, Practical Parenting and Home Beautiful. I really am in trouble.

Lately I have found myself drawn to the conversations of women and I let myself believe it was because they were discussing topics relevant to my experiences as a stay at home dad i.e. parenting, washing, cooking and cleaning. Could it also be due to my raised levels of estrogen?

As crazy as it might sound I find a conversation about how to get your kid to eat, sleep or poo or how to get a stain of a shirt much more interesting and useful than what horse won race five last Saturday or how many beers I can drink.

Admittedly I have never really been into drinking or gambling but now that I am a stay at home dad I seem to have much more in common with the other mums than I do with the dads and subsequently I find myself naturally drawn to them and their conversations.

While I am committed to my stay home dad role and my low cholesterol soy milkĀ  I must continually remind myself to be on the look out for any additional female qualities that may creep in to my persona and cause me to become, well – more like a woman. I am a house husband after all.

Anyone for a soy latte and a catch up..?

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