Ch ch ch ch changes

You should have read that title with David Bowie in your ear.

Wowzers, it’s been a long time since I wrote an actual blogy blog post. Things have changed a lot for me over the past 6 months and it’s taken some settling in. Consequently, my website and blog have been completely neglected.

Changes 🙂  Changes are exciting.

On a personal family note, my 5 year old has started school which took the difficulty level up a notch. I now have a teenager at high school, a year sixer, a kindy kid and my littlest munchikin home with me full time.

Next, I decided to go back to school. Quite suddenly last November, I decided I wanted to go back to uni and do some post grad education. I took on 2 units this semester and had no idea how I’d manage it, surprisingly, I’ve managed it well, having achieved distinctions for every assignment I’ve handed in so far. I’m proud of myself 🙂

I’ve also ramped up my face to face consulting time after taking a few years out of clinical practice after the birth of my now 3 year old. I’m loving that too.

And finally, I’m completing a certificate 4 in training and assessing and am working as a volunteer supervised trainer for the Australian Breastfeeding Association, training breastfeeding counsellors. The course is batshit boring but the experience is great. As soon as I finish the course, I’ll keep the volunteer work but will also start applying for teaching jobs and hope to get a job as a lecturer in herbal medicine.

With all of the above, it doesn’t leave a lot of time for my website and I’ve had to have a really good think (about a six month think) about what to do. In the end, I decided that I don’t want to let this site go and I do want to start putting a bit of time into it again now that I’ve settled into the new challenges. I’ll be simplifying things, updating things a bit and fine tuning it all. The plan is to shut down the shop, which is a great big time sink when done properly (I haven’t been doing it properly for some time). I’ll be selling off remaining stock at bargain basement prices via my facebook page and my local buy, swap, sell page. I’m planning to fill this blog with stories from other mamas. I want real life stories from real mums. Birth stories, breastfeeding stories, parenting stories. This will remain a site specifically dedicated to providing information for embracing motherhood naturally from conception through to baby’s first year. Since my family is well beyond that now, I’m going to fill the blog with the stories of others and I’ll be adding to the information pages as my schedule allows. The big change that you’ll notice is that I’ll be experimenting with putting some google adwords ads on the site.  I plan to be very vigilant about the type of ads that I allow on the site and if I feel that the ads are compromising on the quality of the site, my values as a parent or health practitioner, they’ll go. I just want to make sure the site can earn it’s maintenance fees is all.  Please let me know if you notice any formula ads or anything of that nature.

These changes are my mission for the next week or so. Before semester 2 starts 🙂

If you’ve got a story to share, please get in touch.

xx Julie

Speaking to Your Baby – Preparing them for Life

Today, I’m welcoming a guest post from Rachel Tomas, a writer at www.babysitting.net.

Enjoy 🙂

From the very moment I found out that I was pregnant I began talking with my child. We talked about everything I was doing or thinking. I also sang to them and read out loud when I was reading and I also prayed with them and for them. I knew that they could hear everything, I really did not think about how much they understood, but I wanted them to know everything. Even when my hormones began to wreck havoc on me and I would cry I made sure I told them that it had nothing to do with them, and that I loved them very much.

There has been a lot of research about how much babies actually understand and learn. Some of the research is astounding but since we do not know for absolute sure I am of the school of thought that we should give it all we have got.

My first child was a girl and when she began to talk (more than just a word or two here and there) around nine months or so she seemed to understand so many things we had already discussed. She was so compassionate and sensitive and when I would sing to her it relaxed her so much and when we prayed she got still and quiet. She also loved to sit and listen to anyone read. You could read her the dictionary or a child’s book; it made no difference to her. Her memory was brilliant, after reading her a children’s book she could turn the pages and say it word for word as if she was reading. She turned the pages at exactly the right time and people who would see her would be shocked, thinking that she was actually reading at nine months!

I also talked to them when they were stretching in the womb. My daughter’s feet would come out one side clearly and her head on the other. I would pat her and tell her she was pushing too hard and she would stop. My son was a wiggle worm and he moved most of the night (of course) and we would have long talks about him settling down! I knew he was going to be a handful when he came out. And I was right because he is older now and he can never sit still. He has had a hard time getting his body to settle down all his life. I sang to him quite a bit in the womb and when he was born I sang to him to get him to settle down at night.

Whether it is understanding or just familiarity to the sound of singing I do not know but I do know that it does help after they are born. The get to know the sound of your voice, and even if you can not sing (like me) the sound of your singing can comfort them when they are out of the safety of the womb.

After my children were born we continued to talk about everything. As we rode along in the car I talked to them about driving rules and regulations, car safety, and how important it was that they stayed in their car seats. When we went grocery shopping I talked to them about the selections I was making and why, the prices and how you determine the best deal, and what we were making for dinner that night.

Whatever I was doing with my child I was talking to them. They seemed to love to hear me talk and as they grew they loved it when I made up stories to tell them at story time or bedtime. It was so cute to watch each of my children relate to stories. My daughter loved hand puppets and talked to them as though they were alive, even though she assured me she knew they were not; she has an amazing imagination. My son on the other hand is a practical soul and does not really like to play make believe. He is a factual kind of guy. He hated the hand puppets and emphatically told me that he knew it was me talking! We had to switch over to stuffed animals and do an animated story which made them both happy. We had a black and white cow who loved to smell the flowers in the meadow but seemed to always get close to a bee hive and get stung on the behind. This made my son extremely happy and my daughter too; I can not tell you how many times I have told that story. They still remember it today.

When out walking we talked about the different trees, leaves, and flowers we would see. We talked about the different colors we would come across as well. Everything you do is a learning experience if you talk to your children as you go along. We talked about people running, riding their bikes, skateboarding, swinging, etc. and they listened.

I guess I learned this from my mother even though I do not believe she was consciously doing it. Mom sat me on the counter in the kitchen when she was cooking and told me everything she was doing. She taught me how to make a pie from scratch when I was not old enough to see over the counter. She did that wherever we went; she talked and told us what she knew. And as I watched her when she was at home with us she was talking to my children about everything she was doing just like she did with me.

When my children spent time with Grandma they always came home having experienced some new adventure. She taught them all about nature, fishing, cooking, and inventing. Mom was the queen of invention. She could take ordinary household items and make something really exciting and fun. My son could play for over an hour with canned goods. She helped them make tracks for marbles out of wrapping paper rolls connected together. She put up a zip line in the back yard that they zipped on for years. She taught them to invent fun no matter what they had on hand. This kind of information is something they will use for the rest of their lives. And communication is the conduit that brings it all together, just telling them what you are doing and why and showing them how as you go along.

From before the time children are born they are empty vessels waiting to be filled. When they are in the womb or after they are born and are completely reliant on you is a perfect opportunity to talk uninterrupted! And then when they are old enough to communicate you can share interests with them as you go. So many times with a toddler it is so much easier to stop them from a tantrum by talking to them and changing the subject with something new and interesting than it is to dispel the tantrum.

Once when my daughter was about three and my nephew was visiting who was two I watched an interaction they had in amazement. He was the type of child who wanted anything that you had and tried to grab it away. I saw him take my daughter’s toy and then watched as she let him and quietly walked away. She picked up another toy and became delighted with it and he came running over, abandoning the first toy. She again let him have her toy and then walked over and discretely picked up her original toy and sat down with her back to him to play. At the time I was not sure if this was a good idea, manipulation at its finest, but then I realized that is what I had been doing. Perfect case scenario proving that they do understand and they do learn from us at a very early age. It made me a lot more sensitive to the things I was saying and doing after watching my daughter at work!

Children need the stimulation of communication and information very early on. Most of us learn by repetition, by hearing, seeing, or doing something over and over again. Our children are the same but they do not have to re-learn like we do, they are empty slates on which we can write so we as parents need to make sure we are utilizing the times when we can teach. And the fact that our voices, our talking, our teaching gives them security and comfort is a plus. Because a happy child, a secure child, can soak up knowledge and retain it and excel.

Author Bio:

 Rachel is an ex-babysitting pro as well as a professional writer and blogger. She is a graduate from Iowa State University and currently writes for www.babysitting.net. She welcomes questions/comments which can be sent to rachelthomas.author @ gmail.com.