Baby Care and Parenting Tips

101 Essential Baby Care Tips

Starting a step family is exciting. Hopes and expectations run high. Once again we are a two-parent household. At last I’ll have some help raising these kids! Everyone will be happy and new loving relationships will somehow be there.
Alas, stepping into step family hood isn’t quite that simple. Unrealistic expectations can lead to disappointment, frustration and self-doubt.

Let’s get real! A step family is not the same as a biological one. Here are seven steps toward making your stepfamily work:

1. Give relationships time to grow. Family feelings don’t happen overnight. They can take years to develop.
2. Expect to be compared with the absent parent. You will be tested and manipulated. With your spouse, decide what is best for the kids and stand by your decision unless you both decide to change it.
3. Don’t try to replace the lost parent. Instead, be an additional parent. Also, recognize that kids need to mourn their loss.
4. Don’t be an instant authority. To be an effective disciplinarian you will need support from natural parents on child rearing issues. This will take some time.
5. Make room for confusion. New roles and relationships may be accompanied by high anxiety, competition for attention and loyalty conflicts. Kids may suspect that they are being replaced in your affections by the new spouse. They need to understand that you love and need them and your new spouse, only in different ways.
6. Respect generational boundaries. The potential for inappropriate and harmful sexual relationships is higher in step families because of the lack of biological ties and shared history.
7. Don’t hesitate to ask for help. Get counseling or join a step family organization before problems get out of hand.

Hugh R. Leavell, Ph.D. is a Marriage and Family Therapist in private practice in northern Palm Beach County, FL. Check his website at http://DrHughLeavell

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Congratulations! You may be pregnant or maybe you just had a baby (and lucky you if actually have time to read this)! There’s no feeling more incredible than when you’ve just had a baby. So why don’t you feel wonderful all the time?

Well, even the best events in life have stress attached to them. Having a baby is exciting for everyone. You’ve been flooded with company practically from the moment of delivery. If you’re a first-time mother, hospitals don’t give you very much help or advice; they send you home with this new little creature with an array of demands that you have to try to interpret. And new babies don’t sleep much. At least not long enough to allow you to get some much needed rest.

Add to that the hormonal changes in your own body, and you have a formula that’s guaranteed to be stressful. Sometimes you think you’ll never get a full night’s sleep again. Until the baby settles into a routine, you probably won’t!

To get through those first few weeks and months, here are a few tips to help you get at least a little more sleep.

First of all, don’t try to be a supermom. When the baby goes down for a nap, take a small nap yourself. The laundry can wait and so can the dishes. You don’t need to have a perfect house. There will be time for all that; give yourself a break whenever you get the opportunity.

If you have a good friend or relative to help out, by all means take advantage of that for an afternoon. Grandma would probably jump at the chance to have the baby all to herself for a few hours!

When you put the baby to bed for the night, take some time to decompress and relax so you have a better chance of falling asleep. Take a bath scented with lavender; put on some soft music and baby yourself a little. Sometimes it’s hard even without a new baby to fall asleep right away. There’s a lot to get used to!

Since the 1970s, Every third Sunday of September has been name Grandparents Day to honour grandparents; give grandparents an opportunity to show love for their children’s children.

For Grandparents Day 2009, it also launch Grandchild Connection, offers a user-friendly and affordable video- conferencing service that empowers grandparents everywhere to stay in much closer contact with their grandchildren through the magic of online VideoVisits.

(Business Wire)–
This September 13, 2009, Grandparents Day will be celebrated across the nation.
And now, with the launch of Grandchild Connection, there is even more cause for
celebration. Grandchild Connection offers a user-friendly and affordable
video-conferencing service that empowers grandparents everywhere to stay in much
closer contact with their grandchildren through the magic of online VideoVisits.

Marion McQuade, American founder of National Grandparents Day
(http://www.grandparents-day.com), and Dr. Keith Bolton, PhD, president and
founder of Grandchild Connection, have a shared vision: allowing grandchildren
to benefit from the wisdom and heritage of their grandparents, and enjoy warm,
nurturing relationships with them.

“Our convenient service harnesses the magic of video conferencing technology to
bring the generations together,” said Dr. Bolton. “We`re all about bridging
miles and bringing smiles to grandparents and grandchildren alike.”

Grandchild Connection`s website will give subscribers access to instructor-led
videos presented by Dr. Bolton. Dr. Bolton`s method is a direct result of four
years of his personal research combined with that of child development expert,
Marcia Hillman, LCSW. With help from Grandchild Connection, grandparents can
enjoy seeing and interacting with their grandchildren during live, face-to-face
VideoVisits that include interactive learning and customized game play with
exclusive SeaTails ebooks and custom activities. VideoVisits can be recorded for
sharing with friends or to simply enjoy at a later date.

From the website, grandparents will be able to enjoy many other features
including ToolKits containing instructional DVDs, illustrated Storybooks, and
ShowOffs creativity tools.