Kids having temper tantrums…how to deal with it!

Temper tantrums have been a hot topic for quite some time.  Just search online – you’ll find hundreds of thousands of resources that deal with them.  Bookstores like Barnes & Noble, Borders & Amazon.com alone yield hundreds of books pertaining to the subject!

Understanding why tantrums happen can help parents better deal with kids having temper tantrums.

Kids having temper tantrums are dealing with their frustrations of the moment, whether it’s physical, mental or emotional.  They may be hungry, tired, frustrated, have had their feelings hurt, or are frustrated because we don’t understand their limited vocabulary.  The result of this frustration may be a temper tantrum.

There are certain things parents can do while they’re waiting out this period in their child’s development.  According to Dr. Jay L Hoecker, a pediatrician at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, you should do the following:

  • Be consistent. Establish a daily routine and stick to it as much as possible.
  • Plan ahead. Go out and about when your child won’t be hungry or tired. Always have a snack or portable activity or toy on hand.
  • Encourage your child to use words, or teach them sign language for basic words that are necessary for communication.
  • Let your child make choices (one or the other) when you can, to give them a sense of control in their every day lives.  When they’ve chosen, compliment their choice.
  • Praise good behavior; offer extra attention and lots of praise for it.
  • Use distraction if you feel a tantrum coming on.  Do something – anything! 
  • Avoid situations likely to trigger tantrums.

Dr. Hoecker also says ignoring a tantrum is best.  Like Mama in Stromple and the Super-Huge Temper Tantrum, ignore it and never lose your cool – if you do, your child will only learn that kids having temper tantrums run the show.

Kids having temper tantrums can learn that they really aren’t worth the effort!

This useful tidbit can be found on the site map at www.stromplesspot.com.  The site is still a tiny bit under construction, but I hope it will be finished very soon.  Go there for other great information and resources for kids, parents, teachers, etc. and also for worksheets that reinforce literacy and coloring pages that…well…are just fun to color.  Or, send yours in to the coloring contest for a chance to win a signed copy of Stromple and the Super-Huge Temper Tantrum!

My Mom’s “Secret Glory”

It’s time I opened up.  My Mom has an addiction…to gardening!  Here is one of her recent pictures - I really like this one because dh and I had irises in our wedding:

Angel Iris

Angel Iris

On more than one occasion my mom has said, “I don’t know why I never did anything with the yard when you kids were younger…”   I, in turn, swiftly remind her that it’s probably because she was working practically 3 jobs and raising 2 children.

A no brainer!

There are so many beautiful pictures I’d like to share here, but she plans to sell them online someday soon, and I don’t want to ruin that for her.

Speaking of, if you are reading this and know something about selling a product like this, consider sharing your experience.  You can share your story right here on my site – she’s my mom and she visits often :)

Thanks!

Happy Birthday, Mom :)

Hope you’re having fun and doing all your favorite things :)   I love you SO! much :)

Love,

Stacey Marie

Published in:  on June 13, 2009 at 3:44 pm Comments (2)
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Countdown to “7″

So far, here’s our status on Rachel’s “donate a blanket to a puppy in need” birthday party:

  • 5 out of 11 girls have said they’re coming
  • 1 out of 11 girls have said they can’t make it

This means that, even if all of the girls who haven’t RSVPed are NOT coming, I will still have 7 girls overnight at my house on Friday.

Again, what was I thinking?

Oh, I’m just kidding.  I can handle it.  At least that’s what I keep telling myself :)

I have done the following:

  • Bought 70% of the groceries needed
  • Have 20% of the remaining ingredients on “the list”
  • Have forgotten 10% of the ingredients I cannot do without and will not remember them until 3:30 p.m. Friday.  I will have dh go get them, as usual :)

I have also done the following:

  • purchased the fleece for the tie fleece blankets – both the large piece to donate to the shelter for a puppy in need and the stuffed animal sleeping bags each girl will make.
  • purchased the decorations, plates, cups, etc.

I haven’t done:

Um, everything else:

  • cut all fleece and paired pieces for the choosing
  • blown up more balloons than I care to think about
  • charged the camera
  • chosen games in the event of a rainy day (can’t count on MN – does what it wants)
  • made the cake (hot fudge banana split – YUM!)
  • chosen a punch recipe
  • purchased remaining food items for the party
  • purchased pipe cleaners, tags & beads for the girls’ favorite stuffed animal “collars” (new development)
  • prepped all food items
  • prepped the basement for meals and made it convertible for sleeping beauties
  • purchased all the things I don’t realize I’ve forgotten and will send dh to buy last minute before the party
  • prepped all of the things I didn’t realize I’d forgotten and so sent dh to buy last minute before the party
  • All of the things I’m forgetting

There’s more.  Always is!  I just don’t know what those things are yet.  Story of a busy mommy’s life.  Or a mommy like ME, anyway :)

Published in:  on June 10, 2009 at 10:04 pm Comments (4)
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Animal lovers with animal-loving kiddos, check this out!

My daughter, Rachel’s 7th birthday party is this Friday.  To get ready for it, we did some research online and found a really neat idea.

She wants a puppy birthday.  She also wants a puppy FOR her birthday, but unfortunately that’s not going to happen.  We decided to have the girls work together to make a fleece tie blanket for an animal in need at the local shelter.  I’m so glad someone shared this great idea!

The woman who shared this idea went on to say that each guest was asked to bring their favorite stuffed animal.  Each of the girls then made a tiny tie blanket for that stuffed animal.  Since our party is a sleepover, we decided to make tie sleepingbags for the girls’ animals.

I cannot wait to take THAT picture!  We’ll take a picture of the girls with the blanket they created for the shelter and send a copy along with the blanket when we drop it off.  Rach will also give a copy to each of the girls in their thank you cards, along with a picture of her with each girl holding their tiny sleepingbags and one with all of the girls in their sleeping bags (half-circle) with all of their stuffed animals in their sleeping bags next to them.

I love taking cool pictures.  There’s no better gift than a quality picture, if you ask me.  If all of the girls who were invited to the party can make it, we’ll have a total of 12.

I know, what was I thinking?!

The woman who shared the party idea did say, though, that the girls were so engrossed in what they were doing that the party was very…quiet.

I’m counting on that!

But I’m no fool.  After we finish projects and picture-taking we’re moving on to a small bite of hot fudge banana split cake and then going out to the nearby park.

If the cake stays down, we’ll jump on the trampoline when we get back.  Gotta wear those sweeties out before bedtime :)

To check out many more puppy party ideas and tons of other birthday party ideas, go to:

http://www.birthdaypartyideas.com/

Someone ELSE’s kid :)

(this will move to the “Kids are Awesome” page later)

This is my first post about someone else’s child.  I guess I should have asked my mom to submit this (it’s about my “middle” brother) but I’m the one who was involved, so here goes.

When Middle Brother was about 5 or so (?) he had a quite an impressive patch of poison ivy.  It didn’t start out that way – one day there was a little bit and by mid-afternoon the next day it was all over the place.  I was babysitting so I was in charge of reapplying the Calamine lotion that day. Little people can’t seem to stop from scratching & spreading that stuff all over the place.

Cotton ball in hand, I started applying the meds to the spot between his knees where the rash had started.  Looking around, I realized that it had really spread.  It had now spread to the other leg and covered most of the area between his legs up beyond the hem of his shorts.

“This is getting really bad!  You’re just falling apart at the seams,” I said.

Middle brother looked carefully at the seams in his shorts closest to the area where I had been dabbing on meds and said, “Where?”

Ba-dum-bum.

Kids are awesome!

McDonalds vs. Dairy Queen

Today Joey and I went to the DQ for lunch.  Before you can understand what I’m about to tell you, you need to know this:

Last week we had a garage sale.  Like every year before, the kids complained about the toys I was selling.  Joey (almost 4) was having an especially hard time giving up the stuffed animals (even though they had been in a bag hidden in the closet for the last 6 months).  Finally, we came to an agreement: I would price the animal and she would kiss it goodbye and put it into the “sell” pile.  It gave her closure.  It gave me a helper!

Now back to the DQ:

First, I invited Joey to taste my onion rings.  I picked out one that was nice and crispy because I knew she didn’t like the onion’s texture.  She said it was too big, and picked out one that was about an inch and a half in diameter.  I explained why she should try the other one, but she didn’t buy it.

So, trying to prove a point, I set the crispy one down by her and proceeded to take a bite of the small one, crispy on the outside and filled with a fat, delicious bit of onion on the inside.  She looked at me as I bit into “her” onion ring, asked me if I was saying goodbye to it, and held out her hand with a confused look on her face.

Then she proceeded to take her own bite of the same, juicy onion ring.  The look on her face prompted me to quickly pull all visible onion away from her immediately.

After seeming like she would toss her cookies because there was a piece of onion in her onion ring that made it through customs (me), she then became distressed about other things that bothered her about her meal.  The worst of these problems seemed to be the presence of sesame seeds on her bun.  I tried to convince her that they were tasteless and were only there for looks.  I added that if she were to take a bite of her burger she probably wouldn’t even notice they were there at all.

To no avail.

So I began picking them off.  You know, top layer of the bun and all.  You know what they say about beggars – can’t be choosers and all.  This also upset her so I told her to pick them off by herself.  After about 30 seconds she stopped, announcing that they are probably just there to look cool, but made a point to say that the people at McDonald’s don’t put them on there because they know she doesn’t like them.

Never a dull moment!

On a side note, about Star Kisses:

  1. Theyr’e too big for young people with small bellies and who are lacking licking skills
  2. In Rogers, they come in Cherry or Red, White and Blue
  3. Red tastes like wild cherry
  4. White tastes like cantaloupe.  I think.  Pretty sure.
  5. Blue tastes like blue raspberry
  6. Red, White & Blue Star Kisses may not be for kids who don’t like cantaloupe or who have small bellies and no licking skills.
  7. A Red, White & Blue Star Kiss which a young person who lacks licking skills has attempted to eat and which has subsequently been removed from its stick and has been placed into a bowl turns a pretty shade of purple when allowed to melt and is stirred up well.

Good times, good times…

(This will move to Kids are Awesome later)

Joey, in her tiny collection of only 3 1/2 years has really become quite witty for a little soul.

Story #1 from this morning:

“I love you so much I could eat you all up!  (pause)  But then I wouldn’t have a mama, and that wouldn’t be good. (pause)  But then we could sell your computer.”  (can you tell I’ve been on it all morning?)

Story #2 from this morning:

She loves to stand beneath me while I blow-dry my hair (those of you who know me can attest to the fact that there is plenty of it, so this takes a while).  Today, while dancing from one side of me to the other to catch the warm air she said, with a big grin: 

“I just love when you dry your hair, Mommy.  Mmmmm…Good times, good times…”

She’s something else :)

Missing my first baby, Rex

I had a HORRIBLE dream the other night (full of stress and pain) that involved our best buddy, Rex, whom we miss terribly.  Rex was an English Springer that we were fortunate to spend 12 years of our lives with.  He was our “first child”.  Our “Old Man” went through God’s other door on September 29, 2008.  Everyone who knows him misses him.

Why I have the dreams I do is a mystery – they’re very often all over the map and don’t seem to make any sense.  This dream was no different, but I woke up in pain – my heart was “hurting” for lack of a better word.

So I decided to share this story about our special dog, sort of as an antidote?  Even thinking about the dream still creeps me out, so I guess I’m doing this not only to share the story, but to make myself feel better.

My moms & dad have all read this, but I haven’t shared it with anyone else, if memory serves.  Here goes:

Our Companion

By Stacey Geist

2008

“Are you okay, Sweetie?” she asks me.  I’ve been crying in my sleep again.  She’s so sad, and is crying.  She’s thinking about how she was so lucky to have spent the past 12 years with such a wonderful dog, and how so very human I am.  She’s remembering her darkest days, when I would meet her at the door and spend time looking into her eyes and she into mine, and how we would lie on the couch together for a while.  She would hold me tight and I would tuck in and snuggle her neck while she cried.  After she got through that difficult time she told me over and over through the years how much she loved me and thanked me for saving her life.  She often thanked God for sending me to her.  Now, in my last days with her and the rest of the family, she is feeling guilty.  She wonders if, after the children were born, I got left by the wayside too much.  She worries that she wasn’t good enough to me once our lives changed so much.  She doesn’t know how grateful I was to have been adopted by such a loving family, and how even though the first toddler was pretty tough on me I looked forward to each of their arrivals.  Even amid the chaos, I still felt loved and included.

 

He is so torn.  He doesn’t want his long-time hunting buddy to suffer, but he can’t let go.  Not today.  Not right now.  He’s thinking back to the first day we met.  “You were the perfect little pup,” he tells me again.  “Still are,” he adds.  He remembers me with 4 big floppy paws and matching ears.  He recalls how he watched me grow into those paws and become a great hunter.  He laughs  with me as he thinks about the funny things we’ve been through, like the time I kicked up a deer while pheasant hunting in South Dakota, and how I was so determined to catch up to that buck that I just kept on running.  He doesn’t cry much, my owner.  Right now, he’s trying hard to focus on those funny stories.  Trying to make it through okay.  He’s going to miss me, and I him.

 

We’re nose to nose.  He’s only 7 years old, and old enough to know what this all means.  He is such a good little soul – so capable of empathy it would break your heart.  I’m sorry you’re hurting, Rex,” he tells me.  “God will help you soon, though.  Don’t be scared.”  He looks into my eyes, scratches me behind the ears and thinks about stories he’s been told about times, as a toddler, when he used me for everything from a ladder to a trampoline.  There’s sadness, and maybe a little bit of guilt in his eyes.  I look at him and see the first little one, whom I welcomed home with a kiss and looked out for with no regrets.  I kiss him goodbye.

 

She’s a sweet little girl.  Good down to the core, and very caring.  She’s only five years old.  She knows I’m in pain, but doesn’t understand everything that’s going on.  She doesn’t know I’ll be gone soon.  She wants to dress me up again in her red sequined had and purple fur princess wrap to make me feel better.  She’s a Godsend.  She puts her hands around my neck and leans in for a snuggle, her lips quivering.  She feels lucky when she thinks about what a tolerant, loving dog I’ve been.  I hope she knows that I am lucky to have known her.  To be sure, I gently kiss the tear off the end of her tiny, beautiful nose.

 

The smallest child is the fifth member of my family.  She’s not quite 3, and probably won’t remember me without pictures and stories living on, but I know she has learned to care for and respect animals by loving me.  “Good boy, Rex,” she says softly, to match her sister’s mood.  She very softly strokes the soft fur on my back, and then gives my old paw a little shake.  She’s been smiling at me, but now seems confused and worried as she looks at her sister.  She joins the snuggle and pats her big sister on the back.  I push in a little bit more.

 

My family is worried.  They’re sad and scared and confused.  I understand this, of course.  They wonder if they did enough, played enough, were enough.  What they need to understand is that they did just fine, and exactly as was planned for my life by God.  If I could speak, I would tell them I love them.  I would make them see that I am not afraid, and that I am tired now, and need to go home.  I would reassure them that I am at peace, and that I am thankful to God.  He gave me a good life with people who loved me and cared for me.  I wish I could tell them these things.  Instead, I do what I’ve always done – I speak my heart through my eyes.  They listen, and know.  I can see their understanding as they look back into mine. 

 

Now, as I begin to travel home, I hope they can feel peace knowing I had a good life with them, and that I will see them – my family – again.

I’m a visual person. So sue me.

I can’t help it – it just who I am.  Today, while playing Battleship with my rookie daughter, Rachel, I found myself acting things out and explaining the rules that I didn’t realize she’d never fully understood.  She couldn’t recall where to mark her guesses or mine.  Out of necessity, the old-school game became part laptop, part ocean; I asked her to envision the “bombs” coming over from my side and landing in her water next to her boats and to envision her strategic plan for destroying my fleet on her laptop computer screen up top.

I’m pretty sure this irritates some people.  They must see me coming from a mile away.  But, just like them, I do things the way I feel I should, or need to.  If that means tracing the arc of my imaginary missile from my side of the Battleship wall to Rachel’s while attempting to use my best technical speaking skills, so be it.  She’s my child – I’ve raised her, and she gets me.

Ahhh…perpetuation.

Published in:  on April 21, 2009 at 3:28 am Leave a Comment
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