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Category: Family & Parenting

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  • I’m a Grandmother and It’s STILL Hard to Let Go

    I’m a Grandmother and It’s STILL Hard to Let Go

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    I waited until the taxi pulled out of his sight to let the tears fall. I cried for lost time-a la recherche du temps perdu. Past and future.

    My first grandchild was born in August of 2005. Now he is in first year of college halfway around the world. For the first five years of his young life, I was his nanny one day a week, boarding a 7:02 a.m. train from my home in the NYC suburbs to his apartment in the East Village of Manhattan.

    For nine full hours, I cared for an infant, toddler, preschool child, walking miles on city streets, chasing him around playgrounds, zooming down slides with him between my legs until I trusted him on his own, watching him sleep, feeding him, loving him unconditionally. Almost three years later, his sister came along and I had to divide my time and attention, push an awkward double stroller across uneven pavement, split my vision in two, share my devotion.

    I became my grandson’s one-day-a-week nanny. (Photo credit: Deborah Levin)

    I treasured every moment taking care of my grandchildren

    Somewhere around 6 p.m., I would board a Metro North commuter express train for the 54 minute ride to the station where my husband would be waiting for me in his idling car. I was never exhausted; I was exhilarated. Rediscovering the world through a child’s eye without all the responsibilities of parenthood was an adventure all its own. I treasured every moment.

    Elementary school obviated the need for childcare. But there were still weekends and long vacations when they took over our house. It became their reverse pied-a-terre; from their small apartment in the city they could escape to our large house with a basement filled with toys, a library’s worth of books, front and back yards to explore, a beautiful pool where I taught them to swim, and a long driveway where I taught them to ride bikes. I became the matriarch of childcare in those days.

    My grandson is now living in Tokyo

    Then middle school and high school. Time flew by. And now here’s my grandson, living in Tokyo, and suddenly he’s all grown up, a new language rolling effortlessly off his tongue, guiding me everywhere, navigating the city’s elaborate transportation system with dozens of subway lines, train and bus routes. He’s been obsessed with trains since he was a very young child and Tokyo is a train-lovers paradise. I think, among other reasons, that is why he is here.

    When I saw him last, it was in Hawaii, in August, where I joined their family vacation. Then I didn’t know when I would be seeing him again. I felt certain I would never go to Japan; I do not like Japanese food and have little interest in the country-its history, culture, religions, language. Offer me a trip to any European capital whose art and history I’ve studied and long admired, or Africa where I’ve always been curious about the scenery and wildlife, or Australia which has called to me for years since I read The Thorn Birds. But Japan? No thank you.

    grandmother and grandsongrandmother and grandson
    My grandson is now living in Tokyo. (Photo credit: Deborah Levin)

    Why did I come visit my grandson?

    Yet here I am. So why did I come? I’ve missed him! But why did I really come? He wanted me to visit! But there was something else. It occurred to me on the flight over that maybe I was trying to prove something. But what? I was the world’s best grandmother, traveling an unreasonably far distance to see her grandchild. I was the world’s best mother, making my son happy and proud that I could provide the time and attention to his child that he couldn’t give just then.

    Somehow, I wasn’t allowing myself to remember the effort I put into creating and nurturing the strong bond between us. I seem to have forgotten-or merely belittled-the part I played in the first eighteen years of my grandson’s life.

    His actions proved otherwise. When we said goodbye at the hotel and he hugged me once, and then hugged me again and held on tight for a few extra seconds and kissed my head, I felt so full of love and gratitude that I thought I would burst. I stepped into the taxi and watched while he gave the driver instructions to take me to the airport, making sure it was clear that I was going to the International Terminal. He knows I’m more than capable of traveling alone but I think he needed to make sure I was safe.

    My grandson loves trains and japan is a great place to see them. (Photo credit: Deborah Levin)

    This is the beginning of many hellos and goodbyes

    When we had said goodbye in Hawaii, I remember feeling sad and confused, the ambiguity of his upcoming absence in my life a bit too overwhelming to process completely at the time. This time, we do know when we’ll see each other again, in August when he comes home during his summer break. So now I can imagine the time and place of our next hello. But I also realize that this is just the beginning of many hellos and goodbyes in the years ahead. He’s flown the nest, very far away for now though maybe not forever, and I have to let him soar.

    I suppose it was just as hard to let my own children go off on their own, but they went to schools on the East Coast, where visiting or coming home was just a car ride away. I could bring the extra winter coat or comforter they needed, and they could come home for holidays and birthdays.

    This isn’t the reality with my grandson. Though a generation separates us, making the tether that binds us that much longer than the parent-child one, I still feel its tug. And it’s still hard to let go. I know it’s okay to let the tears still fall. I also know I’ll have to make sure that my passport doesn’t expire.

    More Great Reading:

    Grandparents are Underappreciated: Here’s Why We Need to Change That

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    Deborah Levin

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  • Dear Daughter, This is What I Wrote You at 18, Here’s What I Need You to Know Now

    Dear Daughter, This is What I Wrote You at 18, Here’s What I Need You to Know Now

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    Dear Daughter, 

    On your 18th birthday, I wrote you a love letter that contained all the most important life lessons I knew at the time. Five years later, we have both grown and learned, sometimes the hard way.

    As you prepare to graduate from college and enter the next phase of your life, I am excited to see what’s ahead for you. I know you may be scared, but you have what it takes to make a good life for yourself. Of that I am certain.

    One of my favorite singers, Lori McKenna, is in her 50’s like me. She sums up what it feels like to be this age perfectly in her song Settling In.

    I don’t have all the answers but it’s starting to make sense.

    Lori mckenna

    Here are some of the things that are starting to make sense to me. I offer them as a gift to you on the next leg of your journey.

    I have some advice for my daughter as she graduates from college. (Photo credit: Melissa Roy)

    A mom’s advice to her daughter as she is graduating from college

    1. Have some adventures 

    You have decades ahead of you to settle down and become a responsible adult (whatever that means.) There is no need to hurry that process along. Say yes to last-minute invitations. Jump on that plane and figure out where you’re staying when you get there. Take a job that makes no sense to anyone but you. Move across the country or the world to live in a place you’ve always dreamed about. You can always come back home. But you will never live this day again. Make it count.

    2. Everyone has a story 

    American poet Miller Williams writes the following lines in his poem, Compassion:

    Have compassion for everyone you meet,/ even if they don’t want it./ What seems conceit,/ bad manners, or cynicism is always a sign/ of things no ears have/ heard, no eyes have seen./ You do not know what wars are going on/ down there where the spirit meets the bone.

    Miller Williams

    As you have already discovered, there are jerks in this world. They did not get that way by accident. There are always reasons people act the way they do. Remembering this helps me act more compassionately towards them, because I know their behavior is not about me.    

    3. Don’t be afraid to make a decision 

    If it doesn’t turn out the way you thought, you can always make a different decision. You’re never stuck. Understand, too, that as Rush sang in their song Freewill “When you choose not to decide you still have made a choice.”

    When you are paralyzed by the fear of making the wrong choice, you are not trusting yourself. Remember, you know who you are and you know what to do.  Don’t worry about what other people are going to think. Get quiet and let your higher self guide you to the next right step.    

    4. It’s all about love

    Many people go through life fretting over whether they are following the right spiritual path. I spent years of my life doing the same. But here’s what I’ve discovered: it’s not as complicated as people make it. It’s not about what set of beliefs you follow. If you’re letting love guide you in all situations, you’re living a spiritual life. I learned this from my dad. His mother taught him that “it doesn’t cost you any more to be nice to someone so you ought to do it.”

    Grandmother was one of the most devout believers I’ve ever known, but you would never know what her religion was because she never spoke about church doctrine. Instead, she let her life speak. Love. It’s really that simple. 

    5. Be the change

    If you want to be happy, first make someone else happy. If you want to attract a good partner, first be a good partner. The more love you give to others, the more love will return to you. What you send out into the world always comes back. Choose your vibration wisely. 

    6. Your heart will break. Let it. 

    But first you’ve got to let someone in. It’s risky for sure. If you go through life armored up, though, you will not only protect yourself from pain but you will also prevent yourself from experiencing the full range of emotions, like joy and passionate, mutual love. If you can find a way to lay that armor down, as terrifying as it is, you will be richly rewarded.

    Yes, your heart will be broken. Maybe a few times. But each time that happens, your capacity to love and feel will expand, and you will become more fully human.

    7. Don’t live your life to please your parents 

    Rumi, the Sufi mystic, wrote:

    It’s your road, and yours alone. Others may walk it with you, but no one can walk it for you.

    rumi

    Even your parents. As much as we adore you, and as well as we think we know you, you are the only one who can truly know what makes your heart sing. Chase after it and don’t worry about what we will think.

    This is your one wild and precious life, my love. Enjoy it.

    More Great Reading:

    My Late Husband Wrote a Letter to Our Son for His 18th Birthday

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    Melissa Roy

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  • Here’s the Most Important Thing I Would Want My Obit to Say

    Here’s the Most Important Thing I Would Want My Obit to Say

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    Obituaries are a funny thing. Like, here is a life: someone learned to ride a bike and drank coffee from a favorite chipped mug and argued about curfews and made perfect grilled cheese sandwiches. Here is a person who was terrible at parallel parking and baked homemade sourdough bread and wished they had learned to play guitar.

    Here is someone who worked in finance or social work or maybe never outside the home, who was terrible at telling jokes but excellent at remembering birthdays. How do you fit the story of one’s life into 250 words or less?

    I never thought much about obituaries until my father passed shortly after my 46th birthday. Sorting through his belongings, I found his old briefcase under a pile of sweaters in a bedroom closet, the cognac leather stiff and cracked with age. Opening it was like taking the lid off a time capsule filled with the prerequisite company ID badge on a lanyard and faded business cards.

    Only a single line of my father’s self penned obituary mentioned his family. (Photo credit: Betsy Hegan)

    I found an obituary my father had penned for himself

    But I am never more surprised than when a yellow legal pad falls out covered with my father’s self-penned obituary in scrawling blue ink. It took up an entire page of that yellow pad, reading like a laundry list of his various accomplishments.

    The obituary progressed from college and graduate school all the way through a business career that spanned over 40 years: degrees, promotions, detailed job responsibilities and professional titles that he held. At the very end was a single sentence mentioning his wife and 3 children.

    When I found my father’s hand-written obituary, my boys were 13 and 15. The days of potty training and finding babysitters and negotiating bedtimes and playdates were behind me. While neither of my boys was old enough to have a driver’s license, I could see how time was speeding up as they hurtled headlong into the teenage years. One eye on the learner’s permit on the dashboard (me white-knuckled, clutching the passenger door) and the other looking out the front door, they were already peering at a bigger world beyond our house, our family of 4.

    My dad and me. (Photo credit: Betsy Hegan)

    How do I define what I’ve done with my life

    I had spent the better part of the last 15 years planning my life and schedule around my boys and their activities: my morning run, meeting clients, joining girlfriends at the local wine bar. But in between, thoughts of science projects and baseball concession stand schedules, I could see the blue ink of my father’s words defining his life through his work, scrolling like football scores on Sunday afternoon at the bottom of my mind’s screen.

    Was motherhood supposed to be my defining thing? Or my job? Neither? Both?

    Unlike many in my mother’s generation, most of my friends work outside of the home. We take pride in our type-A ambition; we have careers, juggle parenting and complain (let’s be honest–humble brag) that we do it all. We manage carpools, school fundraisers and dugout mom with snacks in hand, all while meeting work deadlines and answering to clients.

    Life has taken unexpected turns for all of us

    Some of us hold jobs that correlate with subjects we actually studied in college. We’re partners in law firms, handle public relations for theaters, design athletic apparel, own marketing companies and coordinate heart transplants.

    Some of us landed in careers that didn’t quite follow us into motherhood as planned, because real life sometimes takes unexpected side trips–an aging parent who needs care, a spouse taking a job in another city, or a child who struggles in school and needs us at home every day at 3:00pm to oversee homework. No one warned us that, even if we worked in the career we thought we wanted when we took off the cap and gown, life would take turns in ways we couldn’t possibly have anticipated.

    Here lies the underpinning of it: the women of my generation are supposed to have the ability to do all the things, but “all” gets cloudy as you get older. Maybe it was happenstance that finding my father’s obituary coincided with a time in my life where my boys were at an age that they were starting to need me less.

    But show me a woman with her 50thbirthday in the not-too-distant future who isn’t thinking about what she’s done with her life—whether she’s on a path that she chose, or one she stumbled into and is surprised to find herself there, like Alice tumbling down the rabbit hole into Wonderland.

    It’s easy to live an “unexamined life” when you are in the weeds with little kids

    It’s easy to live an unexamined life when you’re in the weeds with small children and a career. You get so bogged down with the daily minutia of homework and sports practices and work deadlines that you fall into bed at night exhausted and don’t think about how you could be living any other life. But reading my father’s obituary, with its timeline of educational degrees and career accomplishments, made me think about my own tumbling. 12-year-old me would be surprised to see that I am not working as an editor and haven’t published a book yet, that for years the only writing I had time for consisted of emails to clients and my boys’ teachers.

    But maybe success isn’t holding the dream job you thought you wanted, but rather remembering what you love to do and carving out time for whatever piece of it you can. Perhaps success is giving yourself grace, and living a life that fills you in ways you never imagined, whether it’s through your career or motherhood or neither or a little bit of both.

    Maybe I should be hurt by only getting a partial mention in one sentence of my father’s obituary on that yellow legal pad. But how we define ourselves is so personal that to judge anyone else for it feels like trespassing on their heart.

    Motherhood is not the only thing I have done, only the truest

    Being a mom is not the only job I have had on this earth, but I would like to think that if someone wrote my obituary tomorrow, they would not mention my career at all.

    My yellow legal pad would have this:

    I am someone who loves finding the perfect gift, makes friends with complete strangers and sends hand-written thank-you notes. I am someone who is terrified of roller coasters and snakes, but not afraid to tackle half-Ironman races, hike precarious mountains and bring groups of women along to empower them to do hard and amazing things with me.

    I am not good at apologizing, but I don’t end any phone conversation with my family without saying “I love you,” and have taught my boys to do the same. I swear too much, but believe in the power of words and how they can change a mood, a perspective, a life. I believe in holding hands and date nights, even after 28 years of marriage. I am a hugger, an optimist and someone who cries easily. I am someone who is highly impatient, but have taught my boys that kindness matters in the world, and tried to live my life by that belief.

    Motherhood is not the only thing, but it is the truest thing I have ever done. I choose to believe that there is grace in knowing that your children see you for all that you are and what you bring to the world, far beyond just being their mom. 

    More Great Reading:

    My Best Friend’s Father Just Died: How We Share Memories of Our Parents

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    Betsy Rathburn Hegan

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  • The 6 Best Twin XL Comforters of 2024

    The 6 Best Twin XL Comforters of 2024

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    best twin XL comforters
    Credit: Buffy

    If your teen is about to head off to college, there’s probably a lot of shopping and packing in your future. From mini fridges to shower caddies to laundry baskets, bedding is likely next on your list. And, to help you find the best twin XL comforters, we put together this guide so you can find the coziest option for your hard-working student. These are ideal if your student wants to use a duvet cover or needs an extra layer in their chilly dorm room.

    With the help of trustworthy publications, top retailers, and customer ratings, we found the best twin XL comforters to fit every budget and style. All you have left to do is click add to cart and finish up the rest of your to-do list before move-in day.

    Check out our list of the best twin XL comforters below!

    Our Top Picks:

    1. Best Overall: Linenspa Down Alternative Comforter – $34.99 at Walmart
    2. Best Budget: Utopia Bedding Twin XL Comforter – $24.99 at Amazon
    3. Best Comforter Set: Casaluna Heavyweight Linen Blend Comforter & Sham Set – $109 at Target
    4. Best Down: Brooklinen All Season Down Comforter – $237.15 at Brooklinen
    5. Best Cooling: Buffy Breeze Comforter – $148.75 at Buffy
    6. Best for Guys: Pottery Barn Teen Camden Reversible Comforter – From $149 at PB Teen

    Reviews of The Best Twin XL Comforters

    1. Best Overall: Linenspa Down Alternative Comforter

    Linenspa Down Alternative ComforterLinenspa Down Alternative Comforter
    Credit: Amazon

    Linenspa offers a budget-friendly, versatile comforter option for your college student. The comforter has eight duvet ties — most only have four — to easily secure it to the rest of their bedding so it won’t constantly slip off. It’s also conveniently machine washable (because what college student has the time or money for dry cleaning?) and even boasts a breathable, all-season filling that will keep them comfy through every season. This polyester and microfiber blanket won’t last forever, but it will likely last as long as your dorm dweller needs it to.

    The Specs:

    • Filling Material: Down alternative (polyester)
    • Shell Material: Microfiber
    • Care Instructions: Machine washable

    The Pros:

    • Inexpensive
    • Reversible
    • Machine washable
    • Lightweight and breathable

    The Cons:

    What Others Are Saying:

    This Linenspa comforter has more than 1,200 reviews and a 4.5-star rating on Amazon. It’s also recommended by The Strategist and Good Housekeeping.

    Buy the Linenspa Down Alternative Comforter: 

    2. Best Budget: Utopia Bedding Twin XL Comforter

    Utopia Bedding Twin XL ComforterUtopia Bedding Twin XL Comforter
    Credit: Amazon

    This box-stitch comforter from Utopia Bedding is best suited as a duvet insert, but the extremely affordable price tag makes that extra purchase a little easier on your wallet. It has a microfiber shell and polyester fill. Your young scholar will be able to machine wash the comforter and easily attach the duvet thanks to its convenient corner loops. They can also choose from a ton of fun color options and patterns, like a moody burgundy or a trendy sage green.

    The Specs:

    • Filling Material: Siliconized fiberfill 
    • Shell Material: Microfiber
    • Care Instructions: Machine washable

    The Pros:

    • Inexpensive
    • Fluffy
    • Corner loops
    • Fun color options

    The Cons:

    • May not be the most long-lasting
    • Hot

    What Others Are Saying:

    Utopia Bedding’s Twin XL Comforter has more than 118,000 Amazon reviews and 4.6 stars. Plus, Wirecutter also named it one of the best comforters and one of the best college dorm essentials.

    Buy the Utopia Bedding Twin XL Comforter:

    3. Best Comforter Set: Casaluna Heavyweight Linen Blend Comforter & Sham Set

    Casaluna Heavyweight Linen Blend Comforter & Sham SetCasaluna Heavyweight Linen Blend Comforter & Sham Set
    Credit: Target

    The Casaluna brand makes some of the most luxe bedding we found, all at non-luxury prices, which is ideal for college student This heavy linen comforter set comes with two pillow shams (meaning one less thing to buy) and has a breathable linen blend exterior with a fluffy down alternative fill. Plus, you won’t need a duvet to cover this high-quality comforter. It comes in two neural colors that will balance out any dorm room.

    The Specs:

    • Filling Material: Rayon, linen, cotton
    • Shell Material: Down alternative
    • Care Instructions: Machine washable

    The Pros:

    • High-quality
    • Shams included
    • Long-lasting
    • Breathable

    The Cons:

    • Only two color options 
    • Requires tumble drying 

    What Others Are Saying:

    The Casaluna Heavyweight Linen Blend Comforter & Sham Set was named the best linen comforter set by Southern Living.

    Buy the Casaluna Heavyweight Linen Blend Comforter & Sham Set:

    4. Best Down: Brooklinen All Season Down Comforter

    Brooklinen All Season Down ComforterBrooklinen All Season Down Comforter
    Credit: Amazon

    If you’ve heard of Brooklinen, you’ll know that the brand is known for its long-lasting, cozy bedding. And while its All Season Down Comforter sports a heftier price tag than other twin XL comforters on our list, it’s a luxurious option for someone looking to splurge on a dorm-ready comforter. With a smooth 100% cotton sateen shell, this comforter is ultra fluffy and warm, making it an especially great option for students moving to places with harsh winters.

    The Specs:

    • Filling Material: Down
    • Shell Material: Cotton
    • Care Instructions: Spot clean recommended but dry clean if needed

    The Pros:

    • High quality
    • Fluffy and weighty
    • Warm

    The Cons:

    • Expensive
    • Not machine washable

    What Others Are Saying:

    Brooklinen’s All Season Down Comforter is recommended as the best down comforter by Wirecutter, The Strategist, Good Housekeeping, and NBC Select

    Buy the Brooklinen All Season Down Comforter:

    5. Best Cooling: Buffy Breeze Comforter

    Buffy Breeze ComforterBuffy Breeze Comforter
    Credit: Amazon

    For the hot sleeper or a student attending college in a warm climate, this Buffy comforter is just as breezy as its name implies. Made with TENCEL eucalyptus lyocell, the comforter is soft and cool to the touch. It also features temperature-regulating technology, so it’s one of the more adaptable options we found. As a bonus, it’s biodegradable and sustainably made, too — and although it’s on the more expensive side, it will last your student for years.

    The Specs:

    • Filling Material: TENCEL eucalyptus lyocell fiber
    • Shell Material: TENCEL eucalyptus lyocell
    • Care Instructions: Spot clean recommended or dry clean if needed

    The Pros:

    • Cooling
    • Fill doesn’t move around
    • Soft
    • Lightweight

    The Cons:

    • Expensive
    • Not machine washable

    What Others Are Saying:

    Good Housekeeping named it the best eco-friendly and NBC Select called it the best overall option.

    Buy the Buffy Breeze Comforter:

    6. Best for Guys: Pottery Barn Teen Camden Reversible Comforter

    Credit: Pottery Barn Teen

    Pottery Barn Teen is undoubtedly one of the best retailers for all things dorm rooms, like a twin XL comforter. This blanket is one of the brand’s most popular, with two-toned reversible color options and a smooth, machine-washable polyester fill. The dark, neutral tones would be great for a guy’s dorm room, and we like that, in addition to a brown side, they have five reversible options to choose from. Think of it as two comforters for the price of one.

    The Specs:

    • Filling Material: Polyester fill
    • Shell Material: Brushed woven yarn
    • Care Instructions: Machine washable

    The Pros:

    • Multiple neutral color options
    • Reversible
    • Machine washable
    • Fair Trade Certified

    The Cons:

    Buy the Pottery Barn Teen Camden Reversible Comforter:

    Other Twin XL Comforters to Consider

    Easeland All Season Twin XL Soft Quilted Down Alternative Comforter

    With more than 38,700 Amazon reviews and 4.6-star rating, it’s no wonder that this Easeland comforter is also recommended by Cosmopolitan as one of the best on Amazon. However, we found that it’s just too thin and stuffy to make our list. The Easeland All Season Twin XL Soft Quilted Down Alternative Comforter is available at Amazon for $45.90.

    Bedsure Twin XL Comforter Set

    The Bedsure Comforter Set has a unique pinch pleat pattern that makes it look more expensive than it is and negates the need for a duvet. Unfortunately, the comforter feels cheap and reviewers note that the pleats don’t always lay right after repeated washes, so it may not be the best option for long term use. The Bedsure Twin XL Comforter Set is available at Amazon for $49.99.

    Bare Home Comforter Set

    Recommended by Southern Living and CNN Underscored, this comforter set has a solid 4.6-star rating. It comes in a wide array of colors and has a very affordable price point, but it also sacrifices breathability and durability due to the microfiber construction. If your student is after year-round warmth and coziness, we recommend opting for the Brooklinen All-Season Down Comforter instead. The Bare Home Comforter Set is available at Amazon for $49.99.

    Why You Can Trust Us

    Hi! I’m Grace and I’m a writer and product reviewer, specializing in home products. I’ve written about everything from kitchen appliances to bedding for sites like Apartment Therapy, Culinary Hill, Gear Patrol, and more. On a personal note, I’m a hot sleeper, so I’ve gotten hands-on with plenty of cooling comforters, sheets, and pillows in search of the best.

    best twin XL comfortersbest twin XL comforters
    Credit: Amazon

    To put together this list of the best twin XL comforters, I started by brainstorming the relevant specifications and features that make a quality comforter, like material and weight. In the research phase, I consulted guides from trustworthy publications, customer reviews, and bestsellers from major retailers. 

    Everything to Know Before Buying a Twin XL Comforter

    best twin XL comfortersbest twin XL comforters
    Credit: Amazon

    What to Consider Before Buying a Twin XL Comforter

    Many comforters look alike, so it can be hard to differentiate which ones are worth your money. Here are a few factors to consider in your shopping decisions.

    Material: Comforters are typically made with two or more materials: one for the outside shell and one for the inside fill. These materials will dictate the feel, warmth, and breathability of the blanket. Be sure to keep in mind whether you’re buying for a hot or cold sleeper (or the climate of their college town), along with any allergies as you shop.

    Weight: While you can look for the actual weight of the product to tell you how heavy the comforter will be, there’s also a specification called fill power, which tells you how many inches one ounce of fill is. For example, a comforter with a fill power of 800 will be much fluffier than one with just 500. Fluffy duvets will likely be less breathable, meaning they’re better for chilly sleepers.

    Price: Depending on the materials, construction, and brand, a comforter can be less than $50 or well into the hundreds. Lower costs may mean that you’ll need to replace the blanket in a few years, but for some, like those heading to college, that may not be a dealbreaker. 

    What Size is a Twin XL Comforter?

    A twin XL comforter is typically 68 inches wide and 90 inches long, giving it about 4 more inches than a regular twin-sized comforter. Twin XL beds, which are usually found in college dorms, are 5 inches longer than twin beds to cater to people like growing students with differing heights.

    Will a Twin Comforter Fit a Twin XL Bed? 

    best twin XL comfortersbest twin XL comforters
    Credit: Amazon

    It’s not ideal, but you can certainly make do with a twin comforter on a twin XL bed. In fact, some brands offer an in-between size that’s compatible with both twin and twin XL beds. Although the 4-inch difference between a twin and twin XL comforter may not seem like a lot, going with the latter will likely improve sleep for a tall student in a drafty dorm room.

    How Do You Wash a Comforter?

    Some comforters are machine washable, so you can just pop them in the washer using the bulky and cold water settings. Because they’re so thick, opting for an extra rinse can help to extricate all the soap from the blanket, but keep in mind that it may need a couple of dryer cycles to fully dry.

    Other high-end comforters may recommend spot cleaning or dry cleaning, which is pretty inconvenient but not necessarily a deal breaker depending on your teen. If you’re using a duvet, the insert should be washed every two to three months. 

    What’s the Difference Between a Comforter vs Duvet?

    A comforter is a blanket that can be used on its own, whereas a duvet insert is a blanket meant to be covered by a duvet. However, these terms are often used interchangeably. If your comforter has loops at the corners or is a plain white color with a thin shell, then that’s a sign that it’s probably meant to be protected by a duvet.

    best twin XL comfortersbest twin XL comforters
    Credit: Amazon

    Prices were accurate at time of publication.

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  • My Daughter Doesn’t Need to Explain Her Romantic Choices to Me

    My Daughter Doesn’t Need to Explain Her Romantic Choices to Me

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    Last summer, my adult daughter decided to put up a profile on a few dating sites. We were sitting in the car after shopping one day when she told me about it and she started showing me her matches. To my surprise, she’d matched with both women and men.

    My daughter hasn’t dated a lot, but she’s always only had boyfriends, and she had never talked about dating a woman. We have very open discussions in our home about all things, especially relationships, sex, and love. My kids know it absolutely doesn’t make a bit of difference to me who they bring home. I want them to fall and love and to be happy with the person of their choice.

    My young adult children do not have to explain their sexuality to me unless they want to. (Shutterstock Antonio Guillem)

    My daughter said that she wanted to date both men and women

    She was very nonchalant about wanting to date both men and women, and so was I. Of course, it was a little surprising and I had a few questions, but I didn’t want to be reactive. After a few minutes, as we chatted, I started thinking that I didn’t want to seem dismissive or like I didn’t care. Because in many ways, I think my daughter was simply sharing something very private about herself with me without wanting to talk about it.

    She’s always been very shy and talking about her feelings has never been easy for her. Even when she was a little girl, it took her a long time to say how she felt. So, instead of flooding her with everything that was on my mind, I simply asked her if she had had any dates with a woman. She said no, but that she was talking to a few of them and then when she changed the subject I followed her lead. 

    I have told my children that their sexuality is not something they need to explain to me

    I told my daughter, and all my children, that their sexuality wasn’t something that had to explain to me unless they wanted to. I told them that I never wanted them to feel like they had to come out or make an announcement to me, or anyone else in the family. 

    Being a teenager and young adult is hard enough without the added pressure of feeling like they have to define themselves. I always want my kids to know they have unconditional love and support from me. Because as a straight woman, I’ve never had to explain who I’ve dated or fallen in love with. And I can’t imagine what life would be like if I had to give reasons for who I wanted to spend my time with or who I fell in love with.

    My kids’ relationships are their own business

    It doesn’t seem like something someone should have to do, and I never want my kids to feel like they have to explain themselves before they introduce me to someone. Not only is it not my business, in my opinion, ‘coming out‘ to anyone isn’t necessary. I’ve always taught my kids to be who they want to be, and to live their life according to their own rules.

    My daughter is now committed to another woman. She’s the happiest I’ve ever seen her, and I get to spend lots of time with them both. There was no announcement or long talk. She simply brought her girlfriend home one day after talking about her for a few weeks and we had a great dinner together.

    Now, the two of them are here all the time and seeing my daughter in love warms my heart. Her girlfriend is amazing. They treat each other well and the two of them are genuinely good friends. Isn’t that all we want as parents? To see our children choose good partners.

    Even if it’s not going to last forever, we want our kids to be with someone who brings out the best in them. Nothing else matters. Not how they met, not what they look like, and certainly not their gender. 

    My family asks me how I feel about my daughter’s relationship

    I had a few friends and family ask me how I feel about it. And the truth is, the only feeling I have about my daughter dating a woman is that I’m glad she’s happy. And, the way I feel about it doesn’t matter anyway. The way my daughter feels about it is what matters.

    Right now, she’s good with it, and even more importantly, she’s very comfortable being around me. And that makes me happy that I reacted the way I did.

    The author of this post wishes to remain anonymous.

    More Great Reading:

    Coming Out: 12 Ways We Can Help Our Gay Teens

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  • Why Only Children Are Poised to Succeed at Work

    Why Only Children Are Poised to Succeed at Work

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    Source: RAEng_Publications/Pixabay

    Worried that your only child will somehow be disadvantaged in their future career? Outdated and unsupported notions of self-serving employees who aren’t team players have fallen away along with other inaccurate only-child stereotypes. A preponderance of research finds that, in reality, singletons have an edge at work.

    If anything, the sense of security, not having to fight for attention, and extra support improve an only child’s chances for a productive, fruitful life. In short, the long-term prospects for a successful work life are reassuring.

    “Most stereotypes about only children aren’t true,” Ava Aznar, a lecturer in psychology at the University of Winchester, reiterates. “In fact, they may end up smarter and more successful than people with siblings.”

    Confidence Helps

    The confidence gained as an only child lets a person speak up for herself and guard her boundaries, which can be helpful in the work world. Only child Micha Goebig, founder and CEO of Go Big Coaching, spelled out in a Forbes article what women in business can learn about confidence from only children.

    Goebig, who helps women in tech and other male-dominated industries lead with confidence, writes that “if you always have someone who listens to you, you very likely grow the confidence to take up space without giving it too much thought, even when surrounded by strangers. You don’t doubt that you deserve the attention, deserve being seen and heard.”

    Having parents as a ready audience pays dividends later, too.

    “Most singletons spend a lot of time growing up around adults, and this can give them a huge advantage later in life, especially in terms of personal and career development trajectories: Those who don’t feel intimidated by smarter people often seek them out and ask questions without feeling they have to make themselves look smarter or more experienced than they are,” Goebig notes.

    She adds that only children also excel in self-advocacy. “By the time others realize that good work simply does not speak for itself, no matter how good it may be, onlies may already be talking happily about what went well on their project and what their personal share in the progress was. And the truth of the matter is, they may not come across as arrogant jerks at all, but rather as confident and competent.”

    Are Only Children Team Players?

    A team of researchers probed deeper into workplace concerns, asking, “Are only children difficult team members?” They posited preposterously that choosing good employees is “an ever more challenging task in the presence of an increasing number of adult only children, who are widely perceived to be spoilt, self-centered and thus with weak team spirit.” They found that the only children contributed as much to the team effort as children with siblings. The only slight variation was reluctance to join the group, but that unwillingness lessened when the only children were given information about their peers’ performance.

    Whether you are looking at what social scientists discovered decades ago or recently, the results are favorable, showing only children have a competitive edge at work. That can be shocking to those who cling to old notions including the researchers who theorized only children would have a “weak team spirit.” Their findings negated their assumption.

    When you factor in a starting point of doing well in school and having “significantly higher educational outcomes” than children with siblings, the only child’s success in the work world seems highly likely.

    Copyright @2024 by Susan Newman, PhD

    Related post: Why So Many Only Children Excel in School

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  • 5 Berry Festivals Near Greenville, SC

    5 Berry Festivals Near Greenville, SC

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    Are you planning to celebrate the berry season with one of the many berry festivals near Greenville, SC? South Carolina, North Carolina, and Georgia have several berry festivals is spring and summer worth a visit to. What better item to celebrate with a festival than juicy, sweet berries?

    Strawberries, Blueberries, and Blackberries are celebrated nationwide; luckily, we have a handful of festivals that are accessible to the Upstate! If you’re a huge fan of these vitamin-packed gems, you can plan your summer vacation to include part of a festival a little further from home!

    RELATED: The Best U-Pick Berry Patches and Fruit Farms Near Greenville | Spring Festivals in Greenville, SC

    South Carolina Berry Festivals

    South Carolina Strawberry Festival

    The list of activities at the annual South Carolina Strawberry Festival includes a pageant, a golf tournament, rides, pig races, eating contests, and so much more! Some considered this event the most popular strawberry festival South Carolina has to offer.

    Date: Saturday, May 4, 2024, 10 am – 10 pm
    April 12, 2024 – April 30, 2024 will have berry-themed festivities preceding the actual 15th Annual Festival on May 4, 2024
    Admission: Free to enter the festival, parking with a fee
    Location: 
    345 North White Street, Fort Mill
    Includes: Pig Race, Eating Contests, Fireworks, Rides and more

    For more info to help you plan your trip, check out our Guide To Visiting York County, SC

    Lowcountry Strawberry Festival

    The low country has one excellent strawberry festival. South Carolina hosts an annual Lowcountry Strawberry Festival at Boone Hall Plantation and Gardens that includes two weekends of events.

    Dates: April 5-7, 2024 and April 11-13, 2024
    Admission: $15 ages 3 and older, Ages 2 and younger are free
    Location: 1235 Long Point Road, Mt. Pleasant, SC
    Includes: Pie eating contests, rides, pig races, petting zoo, jump pillows, rides, and more.

    juicy strawberries

    Berry Festivals in North Carolina

    North Carolina Blueberry Festival

    If you hop in your car and head east towards the coast, you will wind up in Burgaw, North Carolina. Home to the NC Blueberry Festival. If you are planning a trip out to Wilmington for some vitamin sea, this is a great excursion during your trip!

    Date: June 14-15, 2024
    Location: 
    Downtown Burgaw – 106 E Wilmington Street, Burgaw, NC
    Includes: BBQ cookoff, blueberry recipe contest, 5K, live music, car show, and tons of blueberry items!

    Looking to plan a trip to the coast during the Blueberry Festival? Why not consider Surf City, NC? We’ve got all the info you need to plan a trip!

    North Carolina Blackberry Festival

    The North Carolina Blackberry Festival takes place five hours away in Lenoir, NC.

    Date: July 12-13, 2024
    Location: 
    801 West Avenue NW, Lenoir, NC
    Includes: Blackberry eating contest, beauty pageant, 5K, live music, and “bunches” of blackberry items.

    blackberry dessert

    Berry Festivals In Georgia

    Georgia Strawberry Festival

    A huge celebration of everyone’s favorite berry! The Georgia Strawberry Festival has tons to see and do! This would make a great trip to explore the southwest corner of our neighboring state!

    Date: April 27, 2024
    Location:
    Reynolds, GA
    Includes: Arts and craft vendors, Food Vendors, Parade, Strawberry Patch, Antique Tractor Show, 5K Race, Photography Contest, Weenie Dog Race, Fire Truck Pull, Strawberry Pie Eating Contest, Free Kids Activities, Music, Petting Zoo, Free admission

    Georgia Blueberry Festival

    Head to the North Georgia Mountains to enjoy the State of Georgia’s celebration of blueberries!

    Date: May 31st and June 1st, 2024
    Location:
    518 West 11th Street, Alma, Georgia
    Includes: Cooking Contest, Parade, Vendor, 5K Color Fun Run, Miss Georgia Blueberry Pagent

    Has your family enjoyed a berry festival anywhere yet?

    Everything you need to know for spring in Greenville, SC
    pick your own strawberries near Greenville, SC


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  • Dr. Gabor Maté on Why Parents Matter More Than Ever – Janet Lansbury

    Dr. Gabor Maté on Why Parents Matter More Than Ever – Janet Lansbury

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    Physician and author Gabor Maté joins Janet to discuss the importance of developing secure attachments with our kids and why it’s crucial for us to continue nurturing these bonds into their adulthood. How do we remain our children’s most trusted influences while also encouraging their natural drive toward individuation? Can we maintain our role as a primary attachment figure when our child is cared for by others? How do we help kids to develop healthy relationships with peers? What’s the best way to handle exposure to digital media? Gabor addresses these questions among many others and offers suggestions for maintaining positive attachments throughout our kids’ lives.

    Transcript of “Dr. Gabor Maté on Why Parents Matter More Than Ever”

    Hi, this is Janet Lansbury. Welcome to Unruffled.

    For most of you out there, I’m guessing that my guest today needs no introduction. Dr. Gabor Maté is a family physician, renowned speaker, with a special interest in childhood development, trauma, and addiction. He’s authored five books, including the classic he co-authored with early childhood icon psychologist Dr. Gordon Neufeld. The book is Hold On to Your Kids: Why Parents Need to Matter More Than Peers. And Doctors Neufeld and Maté are reissuing it with a brand new chapter called In the Wake of the Pandemic: Peer Orientation and the Youth Mental Health Crisis. I’m seriously looking forward to discussing the invaluable messages in this book, and more, with Dr. Gabor Maté.

    Hi, and welcome to you, Dr. Maté. I’m an enormous fan of yours and it’s really an honor to be able to spend this time with you. Thank you very much for being here.

    Dr. Gabor Maté: Thanks for having me. I’m sorry that due to technical issues, the main author of the book Hold On to Your Kids, Dr. Gordon Neufeld, can’t be with us. But since I wrote the book with him and have worked with him for decades, I think I can channel his wisdom here, as best I can. But listeners should keep in mind that it’s his work mostly that we’re talking about here.

    Janet Lansbury: I believe in you as a channel for his work, and you have amazing work you’ve done on your own as well. And this book, well now you’re reissuing it because you’ve added a new chapter all about the effects of the pandemic. Which I found surprising, your take on it, because it’s very different from the take that we’re hearing from many about it. So I really hope that you’ll speak to that today. But this whole book, it’s really a unique perspective, and remains a unique perspective, even though it was first written back in, what was it, 2008, something like that?

    Dr. Gabor Maté: I think even before then. I think it’s probably 2005 or 2004, something like that.

    Janet Lansbury: You’ve also added some chapters about the digital explosion that’s happened and how that affects this issue. I’m going to let you speak about the issues that this book covers and brings to light for people. It was something that I hadn’t considered before reading this. I’ve known the importance of having a relationship-centered approach to parenting, that that’s what it’s all about. That attachment is everything, that it’s key to the way that children learn, the way that they live and become who we want them to be or who they’re supposed to be. And that attachment nest needs to be present. But what your book with Dr. Neufeld talks about is that, actually, this is even more important than we thought because there’s competition. There’s this powerful draw of peer orientation. Can you talk a little about that?

    Dr. Gabor Maté: First of all, we have to consider human evolution. And from the evolutionary perspective, mammals, hominids and hominins, humanoid creatures lived in small-band groups, where the children were around the adults all the time, 24/7, from birth to adulthood. And even with our own species, we’ve been on the earth for about 150,000 years, that’s the way we lived until the blink of an eye ago. So for 95% of our existence as human species, children lived around their parents all the time.

    It’s like a duckling. A duckling is born, hatches from the egg, looks at the mother duck and imprints on the mother duck, and then follows the mother duck. Not because the mother duck asserts authority or threatens them or anything, just that nature causes us to be attached to our caregivers and to follow their guidance. And that’s the way it’s been for a long time.

    Now, in more recent times, kids spend most of their time away from their parents from a very early age on. In the United States, 25% of women have to go back to work within two weeks of giving birth, which basically means that children are deprived of the natural presence of their nature-intended caregivers.

    The duckling, if it hatches with the mother duck absent, will still imprint on anything that moves. And that could be a dog or horse or mechanical moving toy, but none of which are designed by nature to bring that duckling up to adulthood.

    Our children, spending most of their time away from us, imprint on who they spend most of their time with. Their brain is programmed to imprint and to attach, but nothing in nature tells the brain who to attach to. That’s the job of the culture. So when you have a culture in which kids spend most of their time away from the nurturing adults, they imprint on whoever’s around, they can’t help it. They’re not doing it, their brains are doing it.

    That means our kids are now imprinting and attaching to, and therefore getting their orientation from, immature peers. Attachment is like a magnet. It’s got two poles. One pole attracts, but the other pole repels. So when you’re attracted here, you’re pushing away from there. So when kids get attracted to and orienting by and attached to their peer group, they start pushing away from the adult. And now we think they have a problem, there’s something wrong with them, and we ratchet up the authoritarian parenting, all the punishments, the timeouts, all this stuff, which further drives them away from us.

    And so what we’ve got here in our society, to make a long story short, is a culturally built-in, normalized, absolutely abnormal situation, where kids are getting most of their influence from their immature peers rather than the nurturing adults. And this results in behavior problems, learning difficulties, a lot of what we call pathologies (which are not pathologies at all, they’re manifestations of abnormalities in the environment), difficulties parenting, frustration on the part of parents, all kinds of other consequences which you can talk about. But in a nutshell, it has to do with the loss of primary attachments to the nourishing adults and the replacement—gradually, but insidiously—by the peer group.

    Janet Lansbury: When does this begin? When children are three years old, four years old?

    Dr. Gabor Maté: For those kids whose mothers have to go back to work at two weeks, that’s when it starts. Because then where do they go to? They go to poorly-funded, very often, and poorly-staffed daycare centers where there’s not enough adults to really connect with each child. Furthermore, we have this idea in this society that somehow we have to socialize kids. They spent the whole week in daycare and then, at let’s say age three or four, we arrange playdates for them on the weekend where they can be with each other even more.

    And so I’m just telling you that so many of the problems that parents are having with their kids, there’s nothing because something’s wrong with the kids or particularly something wrong with the parents either. But because in this culture, the loss of parental attachment has been normalized and even encouraged. And there’s this invisible competition that we’re actually taught to court and to encourage.

    Janet Lansbury: So what does healthy socialization look like? I mean, when you say that we’re supposed to socialize, I never consider it that way. I consider that children are naturally socialized. It’s not something that we have to try to make happen for them.

    Dr. Gabor Maté: That’s the whole point. Your assumption is quite right. Socialization does happen naturally. But we can over-encourage it, because we forget or we don’t know that child development goes through phases. It’s like a pyramid. And the base and the broadest grounding for that pyramid is attachment to the nurturing adults. And that has to be maintained. These are not phases that we go through, this is a pyramid that we build. And attachment is the basis of it.

    The second basis of it is not socialization. The second tier in the pyramid is actually individuation, which means the child develops a deep, entrusting sense of themselves. Now for that, attachment has to be secure. When children develop a sense of themselves, they can then respect the individuality of others and hold on to themselves without having to fit in, without having to mold themselves to the expectations of the group. But if they don’t have a strong sense of themselves, individuation, then they’ll try and fit in with the group rather than being themselves. Then we can see where that leads to. You know what the extreme of that is: gang behavior.

    Then the third tier, as Gordon points out, is socialization. So socialization is like the peak of the pyramid. In a healthy sense, it’s based on strong attachments, proper individuation, and then socialization happens spontaneously. We don’t have to make it happen. But we do have to respect the pyramid. And so when we try and push kids into socialization too early, before they’ve individuated, then we’re actually asking for them to just meld in with the peer group.

    Janet Lansbury: When parents have asked me, How do I do this? I need to socialize my child. And I point out—because my mentor, who happens to be Hungarian, Magda Gerber, I don’t know if you’ve ever heard of her, but she used to say, you’re socializing your child with everything you do in your relationship. That’s how they’re learning social behaviors, through you. You don’t have to put them in a group setting. Group socialization is a whole different thing. They’re learning this through your relationship.

    Dr. Gabor Maté: As a matter of fact, this is counterintuitive perhaps, and we’re not here advocating homeschooling, that’s not something everybody just can do, for all kinds of reasons. But if you look at the research, kids who are homeschooled, they socialize better later on. Why? Because they have a stronger, more independent sense of themselves. And now they can respect individuality of others and hold on to their own.

    Janet Lansbury: If parents are in the position where they do need to have their child be in childcare, then ideally we want them to be able to attach—hopefully not as their primary attachment, hopefully that still remains the parent, right? That’s what we want. But they need to form a secondary attachment with those adults caring for them, so that they have somebody that’s an adult to be attached to instead of prioritizing the other children to be attached to.

    Dr. Gabor Maté: Yeah, we’re not saying kids shouldn’t be in daycare. That would not be realistic. A lot of parents, for economic and other reasons, simply have to send their kids to daycare. The question is to recognize what we’ve lost and how to supplant it, okay? So if the kid goes to daycare, the first point is: what the child’s brain cannot handle is competing primary attachments. The child can handle many attachments, but not competing primary attachments. By the way, that’s true of the human brain in general. It’s very difficult even for adults, for example, to be in love with two people at the same time. Eventually the brain goes this way or that way, but it can’t hold on to both.

    Now, the child’s brain, being very immature, is absolutely incapable of handling competing primary attachments. So when the child goes to daycare, the parent needs to encourage the child’s attachment to the daycare provider because that doesn’t compete with the parent, but the peer attachment does. So we have to have healthy adult attachments if the child is not going to be with the parent. It’s like Gordon says: in the morning, the parent hands the attachment baton to the teacher or the daycare worker, and in the evening, we take it back. That’s the first point. When kids go to daycare, parents should hang out in that daycare for a few weeks and make sure that their child sees them, the parent, forming relationships with the daycare provider. So that the child then sees, Oh, okay, I can be attached to both of these people. That’s the first thing.

    The second thing is, we have to understand how children attach. And the more immature we are, the more primitive—and I don’t mean that in a negative sense—but the more basic our attachment styles are. So the first way that children attach is physically. To the senses, by seeing, hearing, touching, smelling the attachment figure. Smell, by the way, is huge. It’s one of the first things that develops. Babies can distinguish the smell of their own mother’s breast pad from that of other mothers within a few weeks of birth. So the senses are very important to children.

    And other forms of attachment, such as being loyal or being important, holding somebody else in your heart, those develop later. You might have friends that you might not see for two years, but you still love them, you can hold on to them. Children can’t do that. Young children, they have to see you, hear you, touch you. Now, what does that mean? If they haven’t seen you the whole day, that attachment relationship has been attenuated. You have to regain it. So when your kid comes home from daycare at whatever age, hang out with them. Not for the purpose of telling them what to do or watching television together or anything, but just for the purpose of reestablishing the attachment relationship.

    So in the first place, kids go to daycare: form attachment relationships with the nurturing adults. And most daycare workers need to be trained or understand the importance of attachment. They’re not just physical caregivers providing food and supervision. They need to be attachment figures, number one. Number two, at the end of the day, you have to reconnect, reattach with your kids. Especially the younger kids, but any kids, at any age. So we can deal with the daycare, not by going back to some ideal time when kids are with their parents the whole day, that’s no longer available to most of us. But we can understand attachment and then we’ll follow the guidelines of attachment to make sure that the kids being away from us the whole day doesn’t undermine our relationship with them.

    Janet Lansbury: Yes, I love these points that you and Dr. Neufeld made in the book about the four ways to nurture attachment. The first one is when they’re infants, when children are very little, you call it “being in their face.” It’s having that face-to-face. And then that becomes “collecting.” I really like that word to describe it. I mean, I’ve seen all these memes and things saying, children want us to light up when they come into the room. Well, there is something to that. When we’re returning to each other, we want to drop everything. It’s so important that we’re not texting in the car or whatever. We’re present, we’re there. I collect you. You’re somebody big to me. You’re important.

    Dr. Gabor Maté: You would do that with a lover, wouldn’t you? You do that automatically. We do it automatically with babies, too. I mean, even strangers. I’ve been on many airplanes where there might be a little baby there in somebody’s arms and the baby cries a little bit. Everybody goes, Aww. We just all naturally attune with the baby. That’s just natural. Babies evoke that attunement/connection instinct in us. The problem is that with the separation from our kids, that instinct inside ourselves is actually softened, weakened. So we actually get alienated from our own parenting instinct.

    When some parenting “expert” comes along and tells you to practice timeout against a two-year-old, basically they’re saying to you, Use the attachment relationship to punish the child. The child’s biggest need is that you should be delighted and welcoming and unconditionally accepting. And when you use a timeout technique, you say to the child, I know what your biggest fear is: the loss of that relationship. And I’m going to deprive you of the relationship for a certain period of time. Now, to a two-year-old, five minutes is forever. And so that, not only does the culture normalize alienation of children from parents, it even teaches parents to use the child’s biggest need—for your delight in them and acceptance of them, an unconditional connection with them—against the child, to try and control the child. Which creates tremendous insecurity in children. It makes them conform to your desires perhaps, but what does it do to the child’s development?

    We have to collect them, which means gather them in under our wing again. And Gordon says, collect them before you direct them.

    Janet Lansbury: It does become less organic as children get older and we think, Oh, they’re fine, or They don’t care, or we’re busy or whatever. And how important that still is with a teenager, with a child at any age. I have three adult children, I still stand up—whatever I’m doing—if they walk in the door. It’s like a huge thing to me, run and hug and so excited. I naturally feel that way. But I think we can get caught up in our work and our lives and forget, especially when children maybe are already gone into more of that peer orientation space and then they don’t seem like they care. But they do, right? They really do.

    And what can we look for, then, with our younger children? What are some of the warning signs that, Uh-oh, there could be something going on here? I mean, when you talk about the behaviors that children have when they do have that peer orientation, the behaviors that they have toward the parents, what do those look like with young children?

    Dr. Gabor Maté: First of all, let me just say that even teenagers need this. Not just even, but especially. Because it’s such a difficult time. They need orientation. And in traditional cultures that orientation was provided by adults and elders.

    One of my sons and I are writing a new book together. I mean, we’re just beginning to write it, so I’m not advertising anything here. But it’s going to be called Hello Again: A Fresh Start for Parents and Adult Children. It’s based on a workshop that we do. And all the adults that we speak to, adults in their thirties, forties who still want contact with their parents. They may not want the contact that they have, which is often very troubled, but they want genuine contacts. Never-mind infants, even adults are still looking for that.

    So what are the signs when kids are getting alienated from us? Well, first of all, they want to be with each other all the time rather than with us, number one. Number two, with the technology that we’ve very unwisely put into their immature hands, they’re connecting with each other all the time. They will not be soothed by us when they’re upset. They will be more oppositional and resistant to our expectations.

    Janet Lansbury: And that part could show up with a child as young as three or four. There’s part of that that naturally happens anyway, but then it can become more of a warning sign if a child is consistently having “behavior issues.” But it’s always a relationship issue when children are having concerning behaviors, it’s usually a relationship issue between us.

    Dr. Gabor Maté: Yeah. In our society, more and more kids are being diagnosed with this, that, and the other. And many kids are being medicated to control their behaviors, which is a vast social experiment in the manipulation of the child’s biology and the indication is that it’s not particularly good for the child’s brain development. In fact, on the contrary, in many cases. What we’re actually looking at is we identify pathologies in a child, but actually there’s no pathology in a child. What there is is a response in the child to the environment, and particularly to the loss of attachment.

    So there’s a so-called diagnosis called oppositional defiant disorder. I say “so-called” because not only does it not exist in reality, not even in theory can it exist. Now, it describes something. So in that sense, it refers to something real. But to say that ODD, that a child has it, is to imply that the child has some kind of a disorder. But let’s just look at it for a minute. Oppositionality by definition is relational. Can you oppose somebody if you’re not in relationship with them? When I talk about this, I say to my listeners, if you don’t understand what I’m saying, lock yourself in a room by yourself, make sure you’re alone, lock the door, and oppose somebody. And if you manage to do it, please put it on YouTube because we want to see what it looks like. So oppositionality by definition implies a relationship. In which case, why are we diagnosing the child rather than looking at the relationship, number one.

    Number two, I mentioned individuation, the necessity for us to become individual beings in our own right. That’s nature’s agenda. Why? Because the parents are going to die. And nature’s agenda is that by the time the parents pass, the child has become their own adult person, individuated, knowing themselves. That’s just nature’s agenda for any species.

    At age one-and-a-half, the child starts saying no. What do we call that? We call that the terrible twos. Why do we call it the terrible twos? Because we don’t understand there’s nothing terrible about it. What’s actually going on is the child is developing their own will, and in order to develop their own will, as Gordon points out, they have to put up a little fence against the overwhelming and overbearing will of the parent. And that’s that no that they start saying. If you don’t know how to say no, your yeses don’t mean anything at all. So there’s nothing inherently oppositional about it, it’s just that—Gordon calls it counterwill. Counterwill is just countering the will of another so that you can develop your own.

    Now, we can manage that easy enough if the attachment relationship is strong. But if we mistake it for a problem, then what we do is when a child expresses their counterwill, their nature-built drive for independence, we push on them even harder. It’s in the nature of counterwill that the more you push on it, the stronger it becomes.

    So who are these kids with the so-called oppositional defiant disorders? Number one, they’re kids who have lost the primary healthy attachment with adults. Now, if you’ve lost a relationship with somebody, you’re not going to heed them. You’re not going to listen to them or allow yourself to be guided by them, because orientation follows attachment. We follow, orient by, those people that we trust and are connected to. If, because of all the multiple pressures in our society, which is not the fault of individual parents, children’s relationships to parents have been attenuated, weakened, then their oppositionality increases naturally, number one. Number two, the more we push on it, the more confirmed and out-of-hand it becomes.

    So who are these ODD kids? Kids who have lost their relationship with the parents and who’ve been pushed on too much. And then we say they’ve got some kind of pathology. No, they don’t. What we have to do is to go back to basics and rebuild that relationship with them. Trust me, that oppositionality will melt like snow on a warm day. We’ve seen this over and over again. But unfortunately the tendency in our society is to pathologize children’s behavior, rather than to see its sources and its remedies in the attachment relationship.

    Janet Lansbury: Yes, that makes a lot of sense.

    And then the second point that you make about maintaining that attachment is giving children something to hold on to. In the beginning, that’s a body part, that’s very physical, but it soon becomes emotional as well. And just that feeling of, There’s this person that sees me, knows me so well, is always in my corner, and somebody loves me. And I can go out in the world and deal with some of the challenges, knowing that I have this person to go back to, that sees me better than anyone else.

    Dr. Gabor Maté: Even in adult relationships, on separation, don’t we give one another little objects, little mementos? Those are something to hold on to. Children need that. So if the kid goes to daycare, give them a picture of yourself. Give them some cherished, not expensive obviously, but some cherished shared object that they can hold on to. So that’s what we’re talking about, is let them take a piece of you to the daycare or to the school.

    Janet Lansbury: And then inviting them. The third one is inviting them to depend on us.

    Dr. Gabor Maté: Yeah. Again, in this society there’s this belief that we have to push kids towards independence, but we don’t. I mean, a mother bear doesn’t have to push the cubs towards independence. At a certain point, it just happens. And the more secure the child is, the more independent they can become. If you look at these attachment experiments with little babies or little toddlers and so on, those kids that are more securely attached are the ones more likely to be able to play independently and then to come back to the mom or the parent when necessary. As Gordon says, to promote independence, invite dependence.

    Janet Lansbury: Right.

    Dr. Gabor Maté: That drive for independence is inherent in the child. At a certain point, the child developing in a healthy way will say, “I’m going to do it myself.” So you’re going to tie their shoelaces: “I’m going to do it myself.” That drive for mastery is inherent in a human being. It has to be. So we don’t have to promote it, we just have to provide the security so that it can unfold naturally.

    Janet Lansbury: Right. And be that person that says, I mean, unless we can’t possibly do it at that moment, and then we say, “Well, I wish I could but I can’t right now.” But that welcomes them. To say, Oh, you want help with your shoes? You know how to do it, but so what? I’m going to help you with your shoes. Of course, I’m always here for you.

    And yeah, I mean, the only thing I was thinking when I was reading that that I would maybe add is just that sometimes we have to honor independence when children do show it. Even as an infant, I want to look over here and notice this right now. That we consider honoring that instead of, Come look at me! I’m the only one here! So when a child does choose it—it’s never pushing a child that way, never. But it’s noticing those expressions of independence and honoring them, not stepping on them. Because one thing I really wanted to ask you—

    Dr. Gabor Maté: Let me just quickly comment on that.

    Janet Lansbury: Okay, yes!

    Dr. Gabor Maté: Yes to what you just said. That’s called attunement. Attunement means being aware of and respectful of the internal experience of the other. At a certain point, the infant may have too much of you looking at them. They wish to look away. You let them. You don’t get anxious, Oh, come back, hey! You don’t try to inveigle them back into relationship with you at that moment, because their need at that point is that it’s become too intense for them and they need to just detach for a minute. If you’re attuned with them, and if you’re not anxious, you’ll allow that to happen. If you’re not attuned or if you’re bringing your own needs to bear, your need to connect with the child to dominate, then you’re not going to honor their experience.

    So yes, you have to be attuned with the child, which means sometimes you have to let them look away and do their own thing. Usually it won’t last very long, but you need to give them the space to do that. So it begins very early. And very often parents hover too much in that sense. They should be attentive to the child and be there for the child. But hovering means that you’re bringing your own needs.

    Janet Lansbury: And fears often, right?

    Dr. Gabor Maté: Your own needs and your anxieties, rather than getting your cues from the child’s experience.

    Janet Lansbury: I’m sure you’ve been asked this, you and Dr. Neufeld probably both, but how does your advice in this book stand with all of this research that’s come out about the over-parenting and the stifling of children, and how that’s linked to children who are depressed, anxious, have no sense of themselves, no individuation, I guess.

    Dr. Gabor Maté: So for sure. It’s like I just said, it’s—

    Janet Lansbury: Lack of attunement, right?

    Dr. Gabor Maté: It needs to arise from the child’s needs, not from the parents’ anxieties. So a lot of that stuff has to do with the parents’ fears. We’ve got to take them to this class and that class and make sure they get into the right school. And if we don’t push them academically, they’re going to… In other words, it actually comes from the anxieties of the parent. And it also comes from the sense of the parent that they’ve lost a relationship with the child and they need to overcompensate. So as long as the relationship is healthy and well-attached, you can’t over-hover.

    Let me tell you about a study that was done quite some years ago now. They looked at mothers and young children, I don’t know, about a hundred or 200 mothers. I quote the study in one of my books, not in this one. And some mothers, very few, were kind of distant and unavailable emotionally for the children as they interacted. Most mothers were good, they interacted, they played with the child. Some mothers were called supermoms. These supermoms cuddled the kid, extra loving, extra connection, and so on. Attuned, but very warm. Thirty years or more later, the kids most emotionally stable or the adults most emotionally stable, were the children of these supermoms. And what the researcher said is, you can’t love children too much. Now, loving them is not the same as hovering all the time and controlling them.

    So the research doesn’t have to do with attachment, it has to do with control and intrusion. And yeah, if you control kids and intrude on them, you’re going to get negative results. But that’s got nothing to do with attachment. In fact, it’s a substitute for genuine attachment.

    Janet Lansbury: Right. And do you also think it threatens the attachment relationship and could cause this peer orientation? That if a child feels like, they’re too controlling or they’re trying to mold me. I mean, I think sometimes parents feel like they’re supposed to judge their child, they’re supposed to keep on them. That that is what love is. That they’re supposed to mold, they’re supposed to be on them for everything and make it all happen. And there’s no trust in the child’s nature. And so naturally children can grow up to not trust their own nature, because their parent that they look to never trusted theirs.

    Dr. Gabor Maté: Returning, I mentioned this book I’m writing, we do these workshops, my son and I, for adults and their parents. This is what we hear so often from parents. I wish I had left them alone. I wish I hadn’t tried to control them so much. They just needed me to be there for them and be there with them, not to try and direct them all the time. And the residues into adulthood are so negative. So we’re not trusting the child, we’re not trusting ourselves, we’re not trusting nature.

    See, children who are connected to adults naturally want to learn from adults. We use this word discipline, but what does the word discipline actually mean? We think it means punishment. No, it doesn’t. Who had disciples? Jesus, for example, had disciples. Not because he punished or threatened them, but because he loved them and they loved him. So then naturally they wanted to learn from him.

    So that’s one of the ways we attach, I mentioned the attachment physically. The next way to attach is actually by wanting to be the same as. So when children are well-attached to parents, they’ll copy what the parent does. I mean, look at all the teaching that that saves. There’s a lot of things we don’t have to teach our kids, they just learn it by watching us. Kids who are well-attached to parents will naturally want to emulate the parent, to be the same as the parent. Kids who are peer-attached want to be the same as their peers and behave like their peers and talk like their peers and look like their peers and wear the same shoes.

    Janet Lansbury: And as you point out, these aren’t unconditionally loving peers. They can’t be, towards that child. And so the child is not getting the kind of attachment that they need.

    Dr. Gabor Maté: No, but they’re getting the only one available to them. And the point is, these parents who think we have to guide and judge and control our kids. No, you don’t. You have to provide the warm attachment relationship. And then you set the guidelines, for which you don’t need to use force because the child who’s connected to you will naturally want to follow your guidelines. So you can back off on the coercive aspect.

    There are limits. You’re not going to let a kid run across the street in order to find out for themselves how dangerous it is. You will not allow that to happen. If you live in New York, you’re not going to let your kid crawl out into the winter snow naked. I mean, parenting is a hierarchy, but it’s a benign, beneficial hierarchy.

    The problem with peer orientation is it actually flattens the hierarchy. So when kids start looking to each other for guidance and validation, they start resisting the parents’ natural authority. As long as we have that natural authority, we don’t have to keep pushing our kids or cajoling them or judging them or controlling them. They will naturally, literally, fall into line. And by the way, this book has been out now for what, almost 30 years? Published in close to 40 languages. We get messages from all over the world that it changed their whole family dynamics and how they relate to their kids. And things are so much easier now and so much warmer now and so much effortless now. The stronger the attachment relationship, the less the effort you have to make.

    Janet Lansbury: Because you’re prioritizing what really works. You’re putting your energy into what actually does help children with their behavior and every other thing that you’re trying to do, if you’re thinking about trying to mold them.

    Dr. Gabor Maté: The problem is that by now, we’re talking 2024, by now, we’ve had several generations of parents who themselves were brought up peer-oriented. So to them this looks totally natural. They can’t even see the alternative, even though historically it’s an aberration. Evolutionarily, as I said earlier, it’s simply a blink of an eye. Not even that. And even historically, it’s just a few generations old. But it’s become so entrenched and so endemic in our culture that we take it for granted.

    My most recent book is called The Myth of Normal. What I’m saying in general in that book, and I mention the peer orientation dynamic as well, is that things have become normalized in this culture that, from the human point of view, are neither healthy nor natural. And so peer orientation has become so normalized that most researchers don’t even realize it’s there. They just think it’s the way it needs to be. It’s unseen. It’s like a hidden epidemic that’s striking almost every family without people recognizing it. And we’re dealing with the effects of it, rather than dealing with the causes of it.

    Janet Lansbury: So you’ve added on chapters about the digital age and then now this recent one about the effects of the pandemic with children. Could you talk a little about how parents can navigate the technology and screens and all of that with a very young child? If you have guidelines for that?

    Dr. Gabor Maté: First of all, as a physician, I can tell you that the parts of the brain that are excited by the technology are the same parts of the brain excited by addictive drugs. The dopamine circuits, primarily. As a matter of fact, there’s a technology company called Dopamine Lab. The technology companies hire neuroscientists. I’m not making this up. They hire neuroscientists to target children’s brains in the most addictive fashion so they get hooked on the technology. And if you look at the research on brain scans of children who watch a lot of digital media, that interferes with the circuits of thinking and emotional connection and insight and creativity. So this is serious stuff.

    Furthermore, I used to work with a highly addicted population here in Vancouver. One of my medical interests has been addiction. You take a child who’s hooked on technology and try and separate them from technology. You know what you’ve got? You’ve got an addict in withdrawal. The same rage, the same disdain, the same oppositionality, the same outrage, and the same obstreperous holding on to that object. This stuff is addictive.

    If I was parenting kids today, I wouldn’t let them look at the screen for years. Certainly I would not let them look at a screen on their own for years. I would not give them a cell phone. I would not give them an iPad. If I watched television with them, I’d be choosing what they’re watching. But mostly I’d stay away from it. And I would stay away from texting and emailing in their presence.

    Janet Lansbury: I was just going to ask about that, yes.

    Dr. Gabor Maté: I don’t know if you’ve seen this, but believe me, I see it all the time. A parent is pushing a kid in a tram, a buggy, and their parent is on a cell phone. What message are we giving the kid when we’re absent in their presence? So it’s not that I would do without my computer or my cell phone, but I would not be letting them interrupt my relationship and interaction with the child.

    And so it’s like everything else. There’s age-appropriate behaviors that are okay for one age, but not okay at another. I mean, it’s okay to have a glass of wine every once in a while, but nobody wants to give a glass of wine to a two-week-old. It’s not age-appropriate. Developmentally, it’s harmful. But there’s no rush. Even if they don’t see technology until age 10, which seems like a sacrilege in this society, they’ll learn it overnight. It’s not that they’re missing anything.

    The problem is that parents are so busy and so stressed. Parents are desperate for a respite, and one way to get respite is to plunk the kid down in front of a TV set or to give them a cell phone. Now they’re going to be okay for hours, but at what cost? So while I understand the desire for the parents for a break and respite, and therefore using the technology as the babysitter, it comes at a great cost.

    Janet Lansbury: I like that you pointed out that even pushing the pram when you’re not maybe facing the child or if the child’s on your back or front or whatever, that they can sense, because they sense everything about us, that you’re doing something else. Even when they can’t see our face. You know, that “still face” experiment always comes to mind when I think of us being on the phone with the baby there and suddenly we’re down a rabbit hole of something else that has nothing to do with them and how strange that is. But even not seeing our face, they sense that I’m not being collected by this person. I’m not in relationship with this person right now, in that moment.

    And this is going to sound extreme to a lot of parents I think out there who have a lot of reasons for wanting the phones, but I believe as you do. And I feel thankful that my children are older and I don’t have to deal with it right now because it is very challenging. And I really do hand it to parents that are able to, not get rid of their phones, but have boundaries for themselves. Especially in those times that are togetherness times, the collecting when we’re in the transitions, when we’re greeting each other, saying goodbye to each other, the meal times.

    Dr. Gabor Maté: Not to mention what that constant engagement with technology does to the parent. This last summer, I took a two-week break from digital media. I tell you, I was an addict in withdrawal. I turned the cell phone off. But even having turned it off, I picked it up several times a day, and then I thought, What am I doing? It’s not even on.

    Janet Lansbury: How many days did it take you to not be checking it anymore?

    Dr. Gabor Maté: The impulse never quite went away, but I never did turn it on for two weeks and I got calmer and more present to life as time went on. So what I’m saying is, quite apart from the impact on our kids, our constant cell phone obsession, what does it do to us? We become more scattered and less present, which then has an impact on the child.

    Janet Lansbury: Yes. I wonder if you’d like to talk a little about this additional chapter, and then I promise to let you go.

    Dr. Gabor Maté: Thank you. So look, COVID, the pandemic was interesting because it imposed an isolation on a lot of people, a lot of families. And I know there’s a lot of controversy in retrospect about those policies, and I’m not going to get into that. I’m going to talk about actually what happened. Two interesting things happened. On the one hand, the incidents of child abuse went up. More children ended up in emergency wards throughout North America with injuries sustained in home violence. Home violence went up. In some families, drinking behavior went up. On the other hand, in some families it was a godsend. And some parents said, My God, I got to be at home to see my kids’ milestones and I got to interact with them. I learned how they played and I played with them.

    So what actually happened was that in families where there was multi-generational, unresolved trauma and fewer resources, emotionally speaking, the pressure of isolation took away from some parents their usual lightning rods, their usual ways of dispersing their stress and their anxieties. They couldn’t go to football games or sports events, entertainment events or to the pub. So the unresolved frustrations and stresses and traumas became expressed in the family. And for those people and for those kids, COVID was a disaster. And furthermore, for the peer-oriented kids, it was a huge loss because all of a sudden they lost their attachments with the people that they were naturally—not naturally, but unnaturally oriented towards, and they were at a loss.

    Those families where the attachment dynamics were functional, and those parents who were either economically or emotionally or both resourced enough, this is an opportunity to deepen and warm up and build the attachment relationship with the kids.

    So some people think that the COVID experience showed the importance of peer relationships, because look how kids suffered in their absence. Actually what it showed was how unnaturally important peer relationships became, so that in their absence, kids suffered. That’s what it actually proved. Rather than countering our thesis, it proved it. But again, because people took that for granted that it’s the way it should be, they didn’t notice that. They thought it was the loss of the peer relationships that created the problem. No, it was the already-absent relationship with the adults that created the problem. In the absence of the peer relationships, the kids just got more unbalanced, which just shows that the peer relationships had been overemphasized in the first place. So that’s how we understand it. And for us, it just meant we have just doubled down on that relationship.

    Janet Lansbury: Wow, fascinating. Really eye-opening, and it makes a lot of sense. It really does.

    I just want to say for everybody out there that this book, it will help you at every stage. It will help you to form secure attachments. And it will also help you notice when things might be not going the way that we hope and there’s some weaknesses in our attachment. And it also helps at any age to know how to get it back. As you said earlier, there’s nothing our child at any age wants more—or that we want more—but there’s nothing they want more than to reconnect. They just don’t know how. And we have to be the ones to lead that way back. But it will work, because it’s what children want more than anything. Whether it’s the two-year-old that we yelled at that just wants to feel safe with us again, or the adult child that feels estranged and doesn’t want to go through the rest of their life feeling that loss.

    Dr. Gabor Maté: The two major responses we get to the book, some people say, Thanks, this saved our family because now I understand things. But the second interesting response we get is, Thank you, this book validated my instincts. So much of the parenting advice people get actually separates them from their instincts. So that when parents say to us, Thank you, your book validated my instincts. And now I can tell my friends who are telling me to use separation and timeout, “You know what? Here are these experts telling me that my instincts are right.” Now, you shouldn’t need experts to tell you that your instincts are right. As a matter of fact, I’d say in any contest between experts and instincts, listen to your instincts and forget the experts.

    Janet Lansbury: Because your instincts know how to attach, that’s a primal thing that we all have. Your instincts know how to attach to your child. Your reasonable advice doesn’t necessarily.

    Dr. Gabor Maté: That’s right. But again, instincts have to be evoked by the environment. So anyway, the two responses we get are Thank you, now we see it differently. But the other response we get is Thank you, this validated my instincts.

    Janet Lansbury: Yeah, I mean this book is so informative and it’s alarming, though. And I could see where you might also get people saying, Oh, come on, that’s hogwash. It’s good to be with peers and it’s the best thing that could happen. But as you two point out, it’s when you come to that peer relationship from a place of you’re still holding on to your parent as a primary attachment, that that’s when it is healthy and works well.

    Dr. Gabor Maté: We’re not saying kids shouldn’t play with each other. Children always have, since creation. But what was the context? The context of kids playing with each other was under the watchful eyes of caring adults. I remember growing up in Budapest, Hungary, in the 1950s. We played out in the street with other kids, but there were always parents on the balconies looking at us. And every neighborhood home was a home to all the kids so that we would go to each others’ homes and other mothers would give us lunch or look after us and so on. So that there was a community, a community of caring adults. So it’s not that children shouldn’t play with each other, it’s that that should not be the primary relationship, number one.

    And number two, it needs to be in the context of adults being present. So if you’re going to have playdates on the weekend, for God’s sake, be there in the same room with the kids. Don’t have the adults chatting away here and the kids on their own. And adults should always be present with them. So maintain that primary relationship with the adults. Yes, kids should play with each other. No, that should not be the primary relationship.

    Janet Lansbury: Because it’s about influence, right? Who’s influencing your child the most? We want that to be us.

    Dr. Gabor Maté: That’s right.

    Janet Lansbury: It’s such a hopeful book. And that last chapter was just such a beautiful ending, really hopeful and will leave parents feeling not afraid, but that this is normal. I mean, it isn’t normal like you said, but it is the new unfortunate normal and that there’s a lot that they can do to counteract some of the draws and influences. That that really is in our power and that children want it to be and need it to be.

    Dr. Gabor Maté: That’s right.

    Janet Lansbury: Thank you so much for sharing with us and for this book. Your work is really profound in so many ways.

    Dr. Gabor Maté: Thanks for having me.

    Janet Lansbury: It’s an honor. Thank you so much. Take care, and we’ll hopefully engage again at some point in the future.

    Dr. Gabor Maté: Take care.

    ***

    Thank you so much for listening and for all your kind support. We can do this.

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    janet

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  • The Eighteenth Summer

    The Eighteenth Summer

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    I came home the other day after a long afternoon of running errands and this is what my front porch looked like.

    The summer between high school and college is the last summer with my kids.
    This is what summer looks like.

    I have a house full of kids every summer

    These shoes mean that I have a house full of kids . . . mostly teenagers. These shoes are a sure sign that it is summer and school is out. These shoes mean there is probably no food left in my house. These shoes mean noise and chaos and laughter and music. It means there are probably kids lounging on my sofa, floating in my pool, playing air hockey or watching a movie somewhere. These shoes mean that we are the designated hang-out house today.

    I paused outside of my door and felt a wave of sadness wash over me as I looked at these shoes . . . shoes from a group of kids that have been hanging out at my house for four years now. Some kids have competed on the same teams, some have been in the same classes as far back as elementary school, some have dated and some have broken up.

    But all have remained good friends over the years. Most of these kids just graduated from high school which means these shoes will be going in different directions this fall when they head off to college.

    They say you only have 18 summers with your kids. I am on number 18 with mine. This realization tugs at my heart and makes me wonder how 18 summers went by so quickly. Big changes are happening around here – for me and all these kids in my house. My heart knows it and feels it and that’s why the sight of these shoes has me feeling a little sentimental.

    After this summer, things will never be the same

    I know that after this summer, things will never be the same again. This is a bittersweet part of parenthood…this transition from having them home to watching them leave. My head knows this is a good thing, but my heart…it just hurts.

    I love having these shoes all over my porch because it means that my children are home. It means that I know where they are and who they are with and that they are all safe. I am very aware that these shoes won’t be here much longer. All too soon these shoes will be scattered across different college campuses and they will be taking their first steps of independence. And I know that all of these shoes might not find their way back home next summer as life takes them on new adventures.

    These thoughts hang over my head like a dark cloud . . . trying to steal the joy from the present moments. I shake my head, trying to force those wistful feelings away. I don’t want the sadness of what is to come to take away the happiness of today. But I am finding that I have to remind myself of that often during this 18th summer because every moment seems bittersweet.

    But for now, I will embrace these shoes and I will be so thankful for them. I will buy all the snacks. I will welcome these kids into my home and let them crash on my couches. I will soak up the sounds of their laughter and I will make them clean up all of their messes. I will pray that everyone drives home safely and I will love having a full house. But most of all, I will do my best to choose happiness and joy for this moment right now and not let that dark cloud of sadness swallow me up. Because this moment right now…it is really good.

    So I am going to treasure this summer of the shoes…Because I know that all too soon those shoes will be running off exploring the world…and my porch will be empty.

    You Might Also Like to Read:

    12 Things About Teens That are Absolutely True

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    Heather Duckworth

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  • Quick & Healthy: Instant Beetroot Banana Jam Recipe for Kids

    Quick & Healthy: Instant Beetroot Banana Jam Recipe for Kids

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    Start your morning off with a burst of color and nutrition that your kids will love! Quick and Healthy Instant Beetroot Banana Jam Recipe for Kids, is a simple, delightful way to enrich your family’s breakfast table. With no cooking required, it’s an easy solution for busy mornings, packed full of vitamins, minerals, and flavors that even the fussiest eaters can’t resist.

    With its vibrant color, natural sweetness, and nutritional benefits, this homemade jam is an excellent choice for parents seeking healthier options for their children. Packed with the goodness of beetroot and bananas, this recipe offers a delicious way to incorporate more fruits and vegetables into your kids’ diets. Perfect for busy mornings, this jam can be made in advance and adds a fun, tasty twist to various breakfast items, ensuring your little ones start their day right.

    Health benefits of Instant Beetroot Banana Jam Mix

    1. Rich in Nutrients

    • Beetroot is a great source of fiber, vitamins (like vitamin C), and minerals (such as potassium, which is vital for healthy nerve and muscle function, and manganese, important for bone formation and nutrient metabolism). It also contains nitrates, which have been shown to have a blood pressure-lowering effect.
    • Bananas are well known for their high potassium content but also provide vitamin C, vitamin B6 (which is important for brain health), and dietary fiber. They’re also a natural source of energy, thanks to their carbohydrate content.

    2. Promotes Digestive Health

    • The fiber in both beetroot and bananas supports healthy digestion and prevents constipation, a common issue in children. Regular bowel movements are crucial for the comfortable digestion of food.

    3. Boosts Immune System

    • Vitamin C in both beetroot and banana is an antioxidant that helps protect cells from damage and plays a key role in the body’s immune function. Adequate vitamin C intake can help reduce the duration of common cold symptoms and improve overall health.

    4. Supports Brain Health

    • Bananas are rich in vitamin B6, essential for brain development and function. This vitamin helps the body produce neurotransmitters, including serotonin, which regulates mood and sleep patterns.

    5. Aids in Hydration

    • Beetroot has a high water content, which can help keep kids hydrated. Hydration is crucial for maintaining energy levels, healthy skin, and proper bodily functions.

    6. Natural Sweetness

    • Using jaggery as a sweetener in the jam can provide additional health benefits, including its content of antioxidants and minerals like iron and magnesium. It’s a healthier alternative to refined sugar, offering a natural sweetness along with nutrients.

    7. Healthy Heart

    • The nitrates found in beetroot are converted into nitric oxide in the body, which helps lower blood pressure and improve heart health. While heart health might seem like a more adult concern, establishing healthy eating habits in childhood sets the foundation for a healthy heart later in life.

    Instant Beetroot Banana Jam Recipe

    Quick and Healthy Instant Beetroot Banana Jam Recipe for Kids Breakfasts, is a simple, delightful way to enrich your family's breakfast table.

    Ingredients

    • 1 cup instant beetroot banana jam mix
    • ½ cup jaggery (grated or finely chopped)
    • 1 tablespoon ghee
    • 150 ml Water

    Instructions

    • Combine 1 tablespoon of instant beetroot banana jam with 150 ml of water, stirring until smooth.
    • Cook the mixture over medium heat until it reaches a thick consistency.
    • Add 3 tablespoons of jaggery powder to the mixture, continuously stirring until it no longer sticks to the pan.
    • And add 1 tablespoon of ghee and mix well until the desired consistency is obtained.
    • Allow the jam to cool completely.
    • Transfer the cooled jam into a sterilized glass jar for storage.

    Instant beetroot banana jam mix can be a nutritious addition to a child’s diet, offering a range of health benefits from supporting digestive health to boosting the immune system and contributing to healthy brain development. By choosing or preparing mixes with natural ingredients and low added sugars, parents can provide their children with a tasty and healthful option. This jam combines the nutritional benefits of beetroot and banana, making it a smart way to introduce more fruits and vegetables into a child’s diet. Remember, the key to maximizing health benefits while enjoying such sweet treats is moderation and ensuring a balanced diet overall.


    Quick and Healthy Instant Beetroot Banana Jam Recipe for Kids Breakfasts, is a simple, delightful way to enrich your family's breakfast table.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is this jam suitable for all ages?

    Yes, this jam is suitable for children (over 1 year old), teens, and adults.

    How long does it take to make this jam?

    It takes about 10- 15 minutes to make this jam.

    What is the shelf life of Instant Beetroot Banana Jam mix from the Date of Manufacture?

    The jam has a shelf life of 2 months from the Date of Manufacture, provided it remains unopened and stored under the right conditions.

    After preparing the jam, how long can I keep it?

    After preparing the Beetroot Banana Jam, you can keep it refrigerated for up to one week. Ensure it’s stored in a clean, dry, and airtight container to maintain its quality and freshness.

    Quick and Healthy Instant Beetroot Banana Jam Recipe for Kids Breakfasts, is a simple, delightful way to enrich your family's breakfast table.

    Quick and Healthy: Instant Beetroot Banana Jam Recipe for Kids

    Quick and Healthy Instant Beetroot Banana Jam Recipe for Kids Breakfasts, is a simple, delightful way to enrich your family's breakfast table.

    Print Pin Rate

    Course: Breakfast / Dinner / Tiffin Box

    Cuisine: Indian

    Keyword: Beetroot

    Ingredients

    • 1 cup instant beetroot banana jam mix
    • 1/2 cup jaggery (grated or finely chopped)
    • 1 tbsp ghee
    • 150 ml  Water

    Instructions

    • Combine 1 tablespoon of instant beetroot banana jam with 150 ml of water, stirring until smooth.

    • Cook the mixture over medium heat until it reaches a thick consistency.

    • Add 3 tablespoons of jaggery powder to the mixture, continuously stirring until it no longer sticks to the pan.

    • And add 1 tablespoon of ghee and mix well until the desired consistency is obtained.

    • Allow the jam to cool completely.

    • Transfer the cooled jam into a sterilized glass jar for storage.

    Buy Healthy Nutritious Baby, Toddler food made by our own Doctor Mom !

    Shop now!
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  • ‘The Ride Ahead’ is about finding power in community

    ‘The Ride Ahead’ is about finding power in community

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    By Louise Kinross

    Samuel Habib is a 24-year-old New Hampshire college student who wants to date. He drives a 350-pound wheelchair and has laboured speech, so dictating what he wants to say to someone who types it into his voice device is painstaking. “I want to figure out how to follow my dreams, but nobody tells you how to be an adult, let alone an adult with a disability,” he says. In The Ride Ahead, a film premiering at Hot Docs April 28 and 30, Samuel crosses the United States with his dad Dan Habib to interview disability activists on how to navigate an ableist world. Samuel is co-director with his father. Go-Pro cameras attached to his wheelchair give novel perspectives.

    BLOOM: One of my favourite pieces of advice in the film comes from comedian Maysoon Zayid. She said ‘Accept the fact that you are disabled and figure out how to work with it rather than working against it.’ What does that mean in your life? Have you ever worked against your disability?

    Samuel Habib: The only thing I don’t like about having a disability is that sometimes people talk to me like I’m a three-year-old. And my GNAO1 neurodevelopmental disorder has made it more difficult to drive my chair by myself and use my communication device. But I’m proud to be a part of the disability community and I have an awesome team of support people every day. The biggest challenge for me is getting into the homes of my friends and family members. Sometimes I also get too tired to stay up late, so I miss out on going to bars, parties and dates at night.

    BLOOM: Why did you make The Ride Ahead?

    Samuel Habib: Disabled people should have their voices heard and we should be able to tell our own stories. As someone who struggles to communicate, this film is incredibly meaningful to me because it is making my experience visible and it is getting mine and others’ voices heard.

    BLOOM: What do you want audiences to take away from this film?

    Samuel Habib: Young people with disabilities who have seen the film so far have told me that they have the same questions as I do about dating, sex, moving out of their own family’s home, how to respond when people talk down to them, work, and college. That means a lot to me.

    My goal for the film is that people won’t talk down to disabled people. I want everyone to know that disabled people demand respect and rights. I want other young adults with disabilities to have the same opportunities that I’ve had for health care, inclusive education, college, assistive technology, jobs, making friends, advocacy and independent living. 

    This film will help people understand how to talk to me and other people with communication challenges. Be patient and do not talk down to me. Ask me how I best communicate. Slow down the pace of the conversation to create more space for me to contribute. If you don’t understand me, ask me to repeat what I said. If I’m typing on my device, don’t start another conversation—please wait for me to finish.

    BLOOM: What was most challenging about creating the film?

    Samuel Habib: Setting up and getting all of the interviewing done. We had to fly or drive a long way for the interviews. On our flight to Indianapolis, they turned my power wheelchair on its side both ways, and it got damaged both ways. On our trip to DC we had a six-hour flight delay, and then as we were finally boarding our plane, another passenger talked down to me, like I was a three-year-old. I wanted to curse at her but I didn’t. On our New York City trip I had a seizure. But we still got the filming done on all the trips.

    BLOOM: You have a close relationship with your father. What role does he play in your life?

    Samuel Habib: My life is very intertwined with my parents, so they are very aware of my deeply personal things. I love to travel, so my favourite part of making the film was going around the country with my dad, seeing new places, filming with my GoPros, and meeting all of these cool adults with disabilities.

    My dad and I make a good team. We spend a lot of time together, and he doesn’t embarrass me too much. I definitely get my outgoing nature from my dad. He’s one of those people that knows everyone. It’s a relief to have him do all the small talk, that’s really not my jam.

    BLOOM: One of the painful parts of the film was when disability justice and queer rights advocate Lydia X. Z. Brown said they were excited to make friends at college, but that didn’t happen, despite their best efforts. Were you surprised that they said they’ve never had a close relationship with someone who wasn’t disabled?

    Samuel Habib: I was surprised. My best friends [growing up] were not physically disabled, but they did not care about my disability. I have lived in Concord, New Hampshire my whole life. The Concord schools were inclusive. So actually, I’ve had a lot of friends that have disabilities, especially in high school, playing Unified soccer, basketball, and track. But my best friends do not have disabilities. At least not visible disabilities. Some have mental health challenges or learning disabilities.

    In addition to Maysoon and Lydia, Samuel interviews the late disability activist Judy Heumann, hip hop artist Keith Jones, Special Olympics marathon runner Andrew Peterson, actor Ali Stroker, and Bob Williams, a key advisor on the Americans with Disabilities Act. The cool animation in the film was done by autistic animators Soul Proprietor. Learn more at The Ride Ahead. Like this content? Sign up for our monthly BLOOM e-letter, follow @LouiseKinross on Twitter, or watch our A Family Like Mine video series.

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  • Recipe: Best April Fools Day dinner ideas

    Recipe: Best April Fools Day dinner ideas

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    Tonight is the perfect night to give the family a good chuckle over dinner. We’re teasing them with a delectable cake for supper that’s really meat and potatoes for the ultimate April Fool’s Day prank.

    Ground meat (beef, chicken, or pork) is very malleable and can be disguised as many things other than classic dinner food. So can mashed potatoes. But these two comfort items together and you have an endless supply of April Fools’ dinners that will go down in the history books.

    Turn your ground meat into sheets of cooked meat that resemble cakes. Whip up some mashed potatoes to play the role of frosting and you can turn ordinary meatloaf into extraordinary cake!

    You can also bake the meat in portions of a muffin pan. Top with piped mashed potatoes and your family will think it’s celebration cupcakes for supper instead of regular ol’ meat and potatoes.

    You can use an ice cream scoop and put a few spoonfuls of mashed potatoes into a tall sundae glass as well. Layer the scoops with brown gravy (which, when paired with ice cream taters, looks just like caramel sauce). Voila: ice cream for dinner! Or is it?

    JC

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  • Dos and Don’ts to “Leave No Trace”

    Dos and Don’ts to “Leave No Trace”

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    Have you heard about Leave No Trace? Aimed at minimizing human impact on nature, the seven principles of Leave No Trace give us some concrete habits to incorporate into our time outdoors. KAG contributor, Liene, has some specific do’s and don’ts so that families can “Leave No Trace” when they adventure outdoors.

    Litter at the entrance to Bald Rock Heritage Preserve, Photo Credit: Ali Beatty

    “Loved to death” is a phrase we have been hearing more often about some of the most stunning places in our region; Max Patch on the Appalachian Trail and Chimney Tops in Great Smoky Mountains National Park are only a couple of places that have required intense clean-up efforts, even closures due to abuse and over-use. But the effects are being felt much closer to home as well, as places like the State Parks, Lake Conestee Nature Preserve, and Upstate National Forest facilities enact closures, policy changes, visitor caps, and in the case of Congaree National Park, an implementation of a lottery system during synchronous firefly season to limit disturbance to critical habitat and try to reverse harmful user trends.

    We need to be better stewards of our region if we want our children to be able to experience the wonders of the natural world, and the tenets of “Leave No Trace” are a great place to start. You may have heard the acronym “LNT” – this refers to the Seven Principles of the Leave No Trace outdoor ethic, which provide a framework of minimum impact practices for anyone visiting the outdoors.

    Why practice LEAVE NO TRACE?

    While we enjoy the natural world, Leave No Trace teaches us how to minimize our impacts. Following the basic principles of LNT helps prevent the trashing of our natural areas, water pollution, damage to trails, the harming of wildlife and overcrowding, all while connecting youth to nature and providing enjoyable outdoor adventure. LNT will not cost you a cent – these are all free things you can do while enjoying the great outdoors as you normally would! It just means taking a few extra steps when preparing for your next adventure, as well as thinking things through while out and about.

    Although Leave No Trace has its roots in backcountry settings, it has been adapted so that the seven principles can be applied anywhere and to almost every recreational activity — from remote wilderness areas, to local parks and even in your own backyard.

    Elk grazing in the near the woods

    How can I practice LEAVE NO TRACE with my children?

    The 7 Principles – Leave No Trace Center for Outdoor Ethics website details these seven tenets, with invaluable info on each of them. Here are the 7 Principles, and seven ways you and your family can recreate responsibly!

    1. Plan ahead and prepare, looking into the regulations, weather, and special concerns for the area you’ll visit.

    Do: Schedule your trip to avoid high times of use, and have a Plan B in case the trailhead/park is full or the park doesn’t allow pets and you’ve got your new puppy along.

    Don’t: Get lost! Bring a map as back-up to your navigating app, and know what the hazards will be in the area you are visiting. Is there a lot of recent bear activity? A burn ban? Is it gnat season? Knowing these things in advance can help you plan your time outdoors so that it is relaxed and enjoyable.

    Did you know that building rock cairns is considered vandalism in most of our local parks? Moving rocks around can lead to resource damage by exposing soil to wind and water erosion, and also disturbs the many critters that make their home in the protected underside of a rock. Only rarely are cairns used to mark trails in the Upstate; most often you’ll see trees “blazed”, or painted with a line to mark the trail.

    Rock piles on a trail, leave no trace

    2. Travel & camp on durable surfaces, protecting our trails, waterways, and fragile ecosystems.

    Do: Stay on the trail and utilize switchbacks, avoiding shortcuts which often cause water to wash out plants/soil and erode gullies.

    Don’t: Hike on muddy trails; wet trails are fragile, and muddy/icy trails can be slippery and dangerous for kiddos.

    Did you know that trying to avoid getting mud on your shoes and going around muddy spots causes what is called “trail braiding”? This widening of trails contributes to both compaction and erosion of soil.

    3. Dispose of waste properly – pack it in, pack it out!

    Do: Pack a bag for your trash, and do a quick check of your campsite/trail rest stop before you leave. Apple cores, spilled trail mix and paper are still garbage – they bring animals into increased contact with humans leading to wildlife becoming sick & diseased, getting hit by cars, or becoming problem animals.

    Don’t: Leave human waste and toilet paper lying around! Not only is it stinky and unsightly, but it degrades our water quality when bacteria enter our waterways!

    Did you know that Googling “how to pee and poop in the woods” will bring you hours of entertainment?

    4. Leave what you find, preserving cultural/ historic artifacts and leaving rocks and plants as you found them.

    Do: Leave flowers for those who come after you to enjoy. This also ensures that our rare plants have the opportunity to reseed for healthier populations.

    Don’t: transport firewood, as you can introduce pests/disease to new areas. (For more info, visit Dontmovefirewood.org)

    Did you know that it is illegal to collect plants, animals and artifacts from most of our public lands?

    5. Minimize campfire impacts!

    Do: Use a cook stove for cooking and utilize established fire rings where fires are permitted, making sure your fire is completely out when finished.

    Don’t: Be the person to start a wildfire with your Insta-photo-op!

    Did you know nearly 85% of wildfires are caused by humans?

    6. Respect wildlife by observing from a distance, and never feed wild animals!

    Do: Respect trail closures and barriers! Sure, it’s tempting to climb the fence to get that great photo out on the ledge, but many times those barriers aren’t only there to protect you from yourself, they also help minimize effects on nesting areas and protect fragile ecosystems.

    Don’t: Stack rocks in rivers! Moving rocks and creating dams to make chutes or pools in a stream causes serious damage to the delicate river ecosystem; aquatic plants and animals make their homes on, under, and around these rocks, and when people move the rocks, the nest is destroyed and the eggs and young fish die.

    Did you know that waterfalls have some of the most sensitive plant ecosystems in their spray zone? When you climb up the rocks on the sides of waterfalls, you are not only endangering yourself (and possibly the lives of the first responders who will have to carry you out), but you are inadvertently creating social trails in the spray zone, encouraging erosion, and possibly helping to create slippery, unsafe areas.

    7. Be considerate of other visitors.

    Do: Follow social distancing guidelines as suggested by medical experts and local authorities.

    Don’t: Lower the quality of other visitors’ experience by playing loud music, allowing off-leash pets, and leaving behind your trash.

    Did you know that there is a hierarchy of right of way considered proper hiking etiquette?  Check out this National Park Service article on hiking etiquette. In general, hikers coming uphill have the right of way, bicyclists should yield to hikers & horses, and hikers should yield to horses and other pack stock. As a mom hiking with small kids, I yield to really just about everyone; it’s considered courteous to yield to other hikers who are setting a faster pace.

    LEAVE NO TRACE principle #8

    Wait, I said there were only 7 principles… Well, there are, but in the last decade another tenet is being considered for inclusion, concerning geotagging. While LNT is not anti-geotagging, serious consideration should be given to whether or not a location is shared with every photo.

    Do: Post a photo that specifies your location along with appropriate Leave No Trace information, as that is a great way to invite people into the outdoors. A geotag can empower people to research safety measures, learn about the location’s history and culture, and find out what to expect when visiting.

    Don’t: Post the location of places that can’t handle increased visitation: the site of a rare flower, a sensitive waterfall ecosystem, a protected wildlife area.

    Did you know that natural areas across the state are seeing an increased amount of poaching, with rare animals and flowers being targeted due to their perceived value to collectors? If you observe illegal activity on public lands, please contact SC DNR Operation Game Thief – see something, say something! SCDNR – Operation Game Thief

    Enjoy your world, leave no trace!

    There are a growing number of examples of places suffering from the negligent attitudes of visitors, such as Bald Rock Heritage Preserve – once home to protected plant species such as Piedmont ragwort and grass-of-parnassus, but today mostly housing graffiti, broken glass, cigarette butts and illegal fire rings. Or Peachtree Rock Heritage Preserve, whose namesake sandstone rock was toppled in 2013 by a combination of erosion and visitors carving their initials into the base. Luckily, the colony of rare Oconee Bell flowers growing in Devils Fork State Park is thriving after State Park officials installed boardwalks and fencing along the Oconee Bell Trail to keep visitors from trampling the tiny flower, but other sites such as Bunched Arrowhead Heritage Preserve has seen theft of plants over the last decade.

    For my family it comes down to is this – the natural areas in the Upstate have given me so much in the last twenty years: trail time with the man who would become my husband and the father of my children, later an escape to the woods with a fussy baby, exercise to help get back into shape after a couple more kids, and most recently therapy in the form of time outdoors as our family struggles to retain some sense of normalcy in an anything-but-normal year. In return for all of that, the very least I can do is bring a trash bag when we go out, to help leave each place a little better than we found it!

    Take nothing but pictures, leave nothing but footprints, kill nothing but time. For future generations to have the opportunity to enjoy our beautiful natural areas like you and I do, to see undisturbed landscapes and enjoy an abundance of wildlife, leave everything as you found it — it’s really that easy. Enjoy Your World. Leave No Trace!

    For a ton of resources on LNT, visit the Center for Outdoor Ethics LNT website. Research and Resources – Leave No Trace Center for Outdoor Ethics (lnt.org) The resources there include Bigfoot’s Playbook, a collection of activities, games and initiatives that explore Leave No Trace principles, as well as youth education info and ways to get involved!

    This post was first published on the blog Femme au Foyer. Femme au foyer: Leave No Trace

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  • Check out the new BLOOM

    Check out the new BLOOM

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    By Louise Kinross

    Take a look at our latest BLOOM.

    Here are some quotes to draw you into the content:
     

    1. From the lead of an Ontario study showing adults with intellectual disabilities are significantly more likely to die of three types of cancer than those without, regardless of when it’s diagnosed. ‘I think it’s a challenging topic to bring back to health professionals, to say ‘You may be contributing to this problem because of how you feel, and how you’re acting on those values.’ We’ve actually gotten a lot of pushback on this. I think there’s a lot of ableism out there and it affects how clinicians provide care and even how research like this gets published.’ (See Health Equity)
       
    2. From the authors of a study that explored why so few Black medical students in Canada become surgeons: ‘For many of the students, their experience of being the only Black learner in their respective programs contributed to their isolation, anxiety, and depression. Black medical students struggled with the idea of being the only Black surgical resident or staff in their institutions and the possible impact to their mental wellbeing.’ (See Research Hits)
       
    3. From a 13-year-old girl with low vision whose passion is blind hockey: ‘I think parents should introduce their kids to as many different things as they can with other people with disabilities. I’ve always wanted to try things.’ (See Adapted Sports)
       
    4. From the Publishers Weekly review of The Lumbering Giants of Windy Pines, for kids aged 8-12: ‘Grit and compassion bolster this exhilarating, folkloric adventure by debut author Netz. After a period of upheaval following the death of her father, disabled 11-year-old Jerry Blum and her mother settle at the Slumbering Giant Motel in rural Georgia.’ (See Book Shelf)

      Like this content? Sign up for our monthly BLOOM e-letter, follow @LouiseKinross on Twitter, or watch our A Family Like Mine video series.

     

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  • Having Fun When the Grandparents Visit!

    Having Fun When the Grandparents Visit!

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    Are you looking for things to do with grandparents in Greenville, SC and across the Upstate? The grandparents are coming to visit your family in Upstate, SC, which is great! But what do you do with them together while they are visiting? We have a lot of ideas for you, most of which are based upon our own experiences with grandparents visiting. We’ve broken our list down by activity level.

    I treasure the relationships my own kids have with their grandparents and wanted to do things with all of them to help strengthen those bonds while having fun. Hopefully, you get some good ideas here and are able to spend some quality time together with your grandparents when they are visiting you in Greenville, SC.

    We organized the list according to activity level, from low to high. Low is the easiest and has the least amount of walking around while high is the opposite. 

    Low Activity Level Things to Do with Grandparents

    TReehouse Cafe & Art Studio

    This is such a fun place in Travelers Rest to take grandparents as they can do some art with their grandkids in a relaxed and enjoyable environment. Coffee, breakfast, and lunch are served there as well. 

    Model Trains Station

    A huge indoor museum that features model trains galore in Taylors is fun for kids and grandparents, especially if they all love trains. There are hands-on exhibits and interactive trains for everyone. Tickets are $10/adults, $6/kids, and $8/seniors.

    Model Train Museum Taylors SC

    Pottery Class

    Taking a pottery class has been on my list forever and what better time to try it out than with a grandparent and your kids. Hollowed Earth Pottery is a great local spot. Prices vary.

    pottery class at Hollowed Earth
    First time on a pottery wheel at Hollowed Earth

    Paint Your Own Pottery 

    If you’re not into making your own pottery, painting your own pottery is a great second choice! You can choose from all kinds of different things to paint. The Color Clay Cafe is popular in Greenville and Hearts of Clay in Spartanburg is wonderful. Usually places have a per person fee plus whatever the cost of the piece of pottery you are painting.

    Starry Nights at the Roper Mountain Science Center

    This is always a winner since the shows are awesome and all you have do is sit there and watch the stars. Be sure to reserve ahead of time since the shows often sell out a month in advance. Tickets are free for RMSC members, $8/adults and $7/kids and seniors. 

    Upstate Pinball & Arcade Museum

    Bring the grandparents to relive some of the fun games they may have played way long ago – and let them introduce your kids to those cooler than cool games at the Upstate Pinball & Arcade Museum in Simpsonville. It’s $10/person for all-day play.

    Take a Drive on the Blue Ridge Parkway

    The views are always amazing on the Blue Ridge Parkway, which runs from Virginia through North Carolina and ends at the Smoky Mountains. I like to jump on near Brevard, NC at the intersection of the Parkway and 276. Take a picnic and drive and stop at the overlooks for gorgeous views! It is closed in the winter and some parts are still closed during the early spring due to ice so check the map before you go.

    blue ridge parkway with grandparents

    Visit the Cradle of Forestry

    This place is super cool and my kids’ grandmother loved it. It involves a little walking around the building, which has incredible exhibits about forestry, including an indoor helicopter that you and ride in with a video of a forest fire below. They also have events and paved trails and you can visit on your way up to the Blue Ridge Parkway as it’s right on 276 in Pisgah Forest.

    Playgrounds

    Playgrounds are a good option when grandparents come to visit so they can watch the kids get out their energy. We’d suggest playgrounds that are shaded and playgrounds that are enclosed

    Go See a Play

    The Upstate has so many great options for theater. Places such as the SC Children’s Theatre, Centre Stage, the Logos Theatre, Greer Children’s Theatre, the Greenville Theater, the Younts Center for Performing Arts, and the Peace Center all have wonderful lineups. During the summer, the Upstate Shakespeare Festival hosts free shows outdoors. 

    A Boat Tour on Lake Jocassee

    There is no better way to see the wonders and waterfalls of Lake Jocassee. We have gone on multiple excursions with Jocassee Lake Tours and cannot recommend them highly enough. Prices vary.

    Waterfall Driving Tour

    Take a waterfall driving tour throughout Western NC and visit waterfalls and overlooks that require little to no hiking. 

    ReCraft

    Endless creativity abounds at ReCraft for kids of all ages. You can make whatever your heart desires with the abundance of recycled material. A maker session is $7/person with no limits on time.

    Recraft Greenville

    Roller Skating 

    This is going under the low activity level category if grandparents want to watch their kids roller skate. Feel free to put it in the high activity level category if the grandparents want to skate themselves! Prices vary per location.

    Happy Cow Creamery

    Touring Happy Cow Creamery in Pelzer is a lot of fun as you get on a big wagon and learn all about the history of the farm and get to see the cows that make the milk. Tours are $8/person and must be booked in advance and run from about late March to November, depending on weather.

    Topgolf

    Grandparents can have fun either playing or watching! You can order food and drinks here as well and they have kids clubs. You pay per hour to rent each bay. Pricing starts at $80 for 2 hours per bay (half price on Tuesdays) and varies by time of day and day of the week.

    For a lower budget option, check out Spring Park Golf Range in Travelers Rest. Just buy a bucket or two of balls (prices range from $6 to $17 depending on the size of the bucket). If you don’t have clubs, they can be rented here for $5. The Whistle Stop Cafe is right next door and they even have an outdoor window where you can buy select menu items to enjoy at the range. Tip: pack some camp chairs to put on the lawn and watch your golfers.

    Home Depot/Lowe’s Kids Workshops

    My dad loves doing this with his grandkids and it’s super fun, easy, and free. Both the Home Depot and Lowe’s have their kid’s workshops back in person now.

    Library Events

    The Greenville Library has so many awesome programs from Family Craft Night to Story Time to painting and science experiments. Plus, most branches have a play area for kids with comfy seating. 

    Bowling

    You can sign your kids up for Kids Bowl Free during the summer, which is so fun and easy to bring the grandparents along to. There are other bowling alleys in our area as well.

    Holiday Lights

    Taking a driving tour around town to see private homes all decked out in holiday lights or doing a bigger drive through experience is a joy for anyone of any age.

    Christmas lights driving tour Greenville
    3 Wake Forest Way, Mauldin / Courtesy of the homeowner

    Medium Activity Level Things to Do with Grandparents

    The Children’s Museum of the Upstate

    Both locations of TCMU in Greenville and Spartanburg are wonderful choices for grandparents to go with their grandkids. There are places to sit and watch the kids plus exhibits to interact with. Tickets are free for members and $10/person ($5/person for seniors) at the Spartanburg location and $19/person at the Greenville location ($10/person for seniors).

    Takeoff Mini Golf

    The aviation-themed mini-golf course right next to the popular Runway Park in Greenville is a lot of fun. Even grandparents who have no idea how to golf (or kids for that matter) will enjoy this place. It’s not a huge course so doable for even those with limited walking abilities. Admission for a round of mini-golf is $11.50/adult and $9.50/kids.

    Takeoff Mini Golf with Grandparents

    Greenville Zoo

    The Greenville Zoo, while small in size, packs a punch in the variety of animals they have. There are also benches for rest and shaded areas. It’s about a mile loop to walk the whole thing. You can rent a wheelchair if needed for $8. Admission is $13/adults, $12/seniors, $10/children ages 3-12.

    Split Creek Farm Self-Guided Tour

    The small, Grade A dairy farm in Anderson has self-guided tours available during visiting hours on Fridays and Saturdays. It’s not a long walk at all and there are goats, and in the spring, baby goats!

    Trolley Rides around Greenville & Falls Park

    My kids love riding the free trolley around Greenville and it’s fun for grandparents to do as well. There will be some walking just depending on where you pick up the trolley and where you want to go, especially if you decide to walk around beautiful Falls Park (which we suggest!).

    Greenville Drive or Swamp Rabbits Game 

    Take your grandparents out to a summer ball game at Fluor Field and eat hot dogs and popcorn. Always a good time! Tickets start at $10. Or go see the Swamp Rabbits play ice hockey at the Bon Secours Wellness Arena. Tickets start at $28.

    Sandy Mountain Beaches

    Most of the sandy mountain beaches involve walking a short distance (or hiking a bit longer) but they are great activities for hot summer months. Many of the places on our list involve an entrance fee.

    Pick-Your-Own Farms

    There are plenty of tasty spots to pick your own strawberries, peaches, blueberries, and apples, depending on the season. Most places involve at least walking into the berry patch or orchard on uneven ground. 

    Play with llamas

    Head to Ellaberry Llama Farm for an awesome tour and cuddling with llamas. You can walk them through an obstacle course and play with them as well. So. Much. Fun.

    llama on an obstacle course
    Ellaberry Llama Farm

    Campbell’s Bridge

    The oldest covered bridge in the state also happens to sit on beautiful picnic grounds. It’s a great place to relax and enjoy the view. There is a decent-sized, paved hill to get down to the bridge though, and, of course, you’ll have to walk back up to get to your car. 

    Denver Downs

    The trip to Denver Downs is an annual tradition in the fall for my family and the grandparents will come if they are around. It’s a big area so it does involve some walking but there are plenty of places to sit and watch the grandkids have fun.

    Oasis Ranch in Seneca

    Another mini-golf course that is fun for anyone is out in Seneca and called the Oasis Ranch and features lots of koi ponds. Admission is $12/adults and $8/under 18.

    See a Sunrise or Sunset

    Some of these places involve short hikes and others are roadside spots.

    High Activity Level Things to Do with Grandparents

    Hiking 

    If the grandparents are up for some hiking, there are wonderful trails all around the Upstate. Easier ones are here. Plus, the Nalley Brown Nature Park in Easley is a great option. 

    Biking 

    The Swamp Rabbit Trail and the Doodle Trail are good options for an easy bike ride along a paved path. You can go on as far or short a ride as you like. 

    The Biltmore

    The famed Biltmore Estate would be a wonderful trip for grandparents who have good mobility. Although you can borrow wheelchairs, they are on a first-come, first-serve basis and there is a lot of walking involved if you want to visit the House and Gardens. Only the first and second floors of the Biltmore House are accessible for wheelchairs as well. Tickets start at around $89 depending on the season.

    Ziplining

    If you’ve got those kind of grandparents, there are lots of good zip lining options around the Upstate. If the grandparents would rather the kids zip line all over the place, Flying Rabbit Adventures in Greenville is a fantastic option. They have a beautiful, covered terrace where anyone can relax and watch the zipliners.

    ziplining greenville sc

    Festivals

    I love, love festivals in Greenville but they will certainly involve a lot of walking around. The Duck Derby, Artisphere, Fall for Greenville, and the Greek Festival are all my favorites and I think are great options for the more active grandparents. The Greek Festival in Greenville involves the least amount of walking, especially if you drop off the grandparents at the entrance.

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    Kristina Hernandez

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  • The March of Dimes: One Family’s Personal Journey

    The March of Dimes: One Family’s Personal Journey

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    Looking for a way to give back to the community this spring? The March of Dimes Greenville, SC March For Babies event will be coming up at the end of April. Find out about what this organization does and how you can help!

    Originally published in 2016, this piece has been updated with information about the 2024 March of Dimes March For Babies event. This year’s events will be on April 26th, 2024 in Greenville, SC and on April 20th, 2024 in Spartanburg, SC

    Before March 20, 2014, I didn’t know much about the March of Dimes or their mission, and I certainly had never considered their influence in my life.  But that all changed when my identical twins were born at just 25 weeks and 4 days gestation.  In the almost five months we spent in the Neonatal ICU (NICU), I learned the very personal impact the March of Dimes has had on every mother and baby born since 1944.

    The History of the March of Dimes

    The March of Dimes was founded in 1944 as the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis by President Franklin Roosevelt, influenced by his own personal struggle with polio.  The foundation funded research for vaccines that effectively ended the polio epidemic in the United States.  With its original mission accomplished, the foundation turned its focus to preventing birth defects and infant mortality. 

    This is still the focus of the March of Dimes today.  The funds raised through the March for Babies events throughout the U.S. fund critical research that is dramatically increasing the survival rate of babies.  The March of Dimes has launched five Prematurity Research Centers in the U.S., integrating scientists from individual disciplines to form innovative collaborations that can accelerate research discoveries.

    My Family’s Personal Relationship with March of Dimes

    Just 16 weeks into my pregnancy, I was referred to a high-risk obstetrician due to twin B’s smaller size.  I had ultrasounds twice weekly to monitor the growth, amniotic fluid, heart rate, and other vitals of the twins.  I was referred to the hospital for monitoring at 25 weeks 4 days, and within 3 hours of admission, my twins were born due to absent cord blood flow and a disappearing heart rate in twin B.  Twin A, Mateo, weighed 1 pound, 13 ounces.  Twin B, Marcos, weighed 1 pound, 6.6 ounces.

    Due to premature birth, my twins had numerous medical concerns. These including brain bleeds, retinopathy of prematurity (ROP), and chronic lung disease.  Their immature lungs caused them to struggle to breathe. They were on a ventilator for the first two months of their lives. Surfactant is a protein the body produces that keeps small air sacs in the lungs from collapsing. Their bodies were not producing an adequate amount, so they both received doses of surfactant while in the NICU.  Surfactant was available to us because of the research funded by the March of Dimes.

    Family who benefited from March of Dimes.

    Then and Now

    Mateo and Marcos are happy, healthy boys thanks to the knowledge and technology available to healthcare professionals today. Most of which would not be possible without the research funded by the March of Dimes.  We are so thankful for the work they do and blessed to be able to help them continue the research to end premature births.

    2024 Upstate Events for March of Dimes: Greenville, SC & Spartanburg, SC

    The Greenville County March for Babies will be held on April 26th, 2024. The Spartanburg March for Babies will be held on April 20th, 2024. We hope you will join the walk, and will get involved with the March of Dimes.  You can sign up for March for Babies in your area through the organization’s online portal.

    Greenville County
    April 26th, 2024 | In-person @ 6:30 pm
    Unity Park | 320 S Hudson Street, Greenville, SC

    Spartanburg County
    April 20th, 2024 | In-person @ 9:00 am
    Duncan Park | 1000 Duncan Park Drive, Spartanburg, SC

    Mother holding her baby

    Learn more about The March of Dimes

    Visit The March of Dimes website.
    Learn about the March of Dimes research.

    Has your family been personally impacted by The March of Dimes?

    Meet Cathy Rodriguez

    Cathy Rodriguez is a wife to Adan and mom of twins Marcos & Mateo. She’s originally from Texas, and has been in Greenville since 2011. She is a graduate of Texas A&M University and works for Fluor as a Sr. Human Resources Manager.

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    Kidding Around Contributor

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  • Giant Indoor Playground, Laser Tag, Movies, and More!

    Giant Indoor Playground, Laser Tag, Movies, and More!

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    Have you visited the awesome indoor entertainment complex, The Big E, in Gaffney, SC? We sent Local mom Rebecca Parrish for a fun day with her family! She shares what her family loves about The Big E in Gaffney, SC and all of the activities you will find there.

    What You’ll Find at The Big E: Gaffney, SC

    Our family took a quick 45 minute road trip north on I-85 to exit 90 to visit Gaffney, South Carolina. Nestled next to the Gaffney Outlet Marketplace (A Simon Center), locally known as the “yellow mall”, The Big E in Gaffney, SC is an entertainment center promising fun for every age. It is a great place to spend the day and enjoy new experiences with your child, or a spot for birthday party joy.

    The Movie Theatre

    The Big E Gaffney features eight (8) movie theatres screening wide-release new blockbuster movies. They strictly enforce rating policies for ticketing. The theater is comfortable and has a high quality sound system, digital projection, and stadium style seating. You can purchase tickets ahead of time through The Big E online theatre portal, where you will find showtimes, movie ratings, and run times for each moving showing. Ticket prices run from $$8.25 – $10.25, which is slightly more affordable than some other movie theatre chains.

    A Bowling Alley

    The Big E also has a large bowling alley with 16 lanes where they feature open bowling ($5 per person plus $3.00 per person for shoes) and cosmic bowling ($6 per person) on weekends. You can choose to rent a lane by game or by the hour. Big E has mixed and youth leagues, and they participate in the Kids Bowl Free program in the spring and summer.

    The bowling area also has flat-screen TVs and an area for food and beverages. The concessions include a variety of snacks and fries, pizza, wings, and “plates” like chicken tenders and hot dogs/corn dogs.

    Bowling at The Big E in Gaffney, South Carolina

    Playland Indoor Playground

    Younger children will love the indoor playland which involves climbing up levels, over rope bridges, on swings, and down slides. They even have a Ballocity Blast Center, where hundreds of foam balls are propelled out of mini air cannons. The playland is padded, which is always a plus. Parents are welcome to hang out in the cafe area located nearby while their children play. The cost is $7 per child for an unlimited day pass. Be sure to bring socks, but they do have them for $3.00 in case you need to purchase a pair.

    The Arcade

    The playland shares space with the 60 game arcade area, which houses lots of arcade games (including old favorites like Skee Ball to high-tech games like a Star Wars simulator), and the bumper cars (my personal favorite). Don’t leave the Big E without taking a spin on these spinning, neon-round cars.

    The best part about playing is the ease of it; the Big E Gaffney sells a “ Big E Fun Card” that parents can load with an amount of money. This card is used at each of the attractions and the arcade, so rather than keeping up with dollars and loose change, kids or adults just use the card. We found this so simple and a lesson for our child about making smart choices about what he wanted to try. They often run promotions for Fun Cards, which is a good way to get extra bang for your buck!

    Bumper cars at The Big E in Gaffney, South Carolina

    Laser Tag

    By far, our favorite part of our Big E adventure was Laser Tag. For $8 per person, you get an amazing, action-packed game lasting about 10-15 minutes. Individuals are suited up with high-tech vests that react with vibrations and sound, and laser guns (called phasers) that you reload as you play on the multi-level course with teammates. Black lights, glowing barriers, fog, and music add to the excitement; and spectators can watch the action on a screen outside the arena. At the end of the match, points are tallied and a winner is revealed. My son is still buzzing from his victory!

    Mini Golf and Zip Line

    Outside, the complex includes an adventure mini golf course and a challenging zip line. The day we ventured out, it was too cold and windy to try these. However, the area looked fun for a future warm day when we have some funds for fun!

    Host Your Birthday Party at The Big E: Gaffney, SC

    Having a birthday party at The Big E would make a epic memory for you kids. You can have a Mini Golf Party, Playland Party, Movie Party, or a Bowling Party. You can even add on laser tag. Parties for up to 10 guests cost around $205. You’ll get access to one attraction, pizza, drinks, ice cream, and arcade cards. You’ll also get a party host to make everything go seamlessly.

    Plan Your Trip to The Big E: Gaffney, South Carolina

    The Big E Gaffney
    1100 Factory Shops Blvd.
    Gaffney, SC 29341
    864.489.1515
    Hours vary by day and by attraction.

    Does a family outing to The Big E Gaffney sound perfect for your crew?

    Meet Rebecca Parrish

    Rebecca Raulerson Parrish is a former English teacher turned non-profit administrator who currently works with Women Giving for Spartanburg and Five Twenty Consulting. She serves on the board of the Spartanburg Little Theatre and is proudly balancing books as Treasurer for the Jesse Boyd Elementary PTSO. A native of Lakeland, Florida, Rebecca loves living in Spartanburg, where she enjoys lots of adventures (and four seasons) with her husband, nine-year-old son, dog, bird and three pet chickens.

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    Kidding Around Team

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  • 10 Amazing Weekend and Day Trips from Spartanburg, SC

    10 Amazing Weekend and Day Trips from Spartanburg, SC

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    Are you searching for daytrips from Spartanburg, SC where you can have a fun time exploring somewhere new? You can drive to all these locations in 8 hours or less saving the price of airline tickets. Keep reading to find out which places are less than a day’s drive from Spartanburg.

    Let’s face it- with children, vacations can be expensive, especially when you need to travel by plane. Luckily, you live in the Upstate, and are within a day’s drive to plenty of places you and your family can enjoy as a vacation!


    10 Ideas for Daytrips From Spartanburg, SC (eight hours or less)

    Savannah, GA

    Distance: 247 Miles; Average Travel Time: 3 hours 45 minutes

    Savannah may not seem like the stand-out place to go to bring your family, but they have quite a bit to keep you busy. The Savannah Children’s Museum is two-levels of outdoor fun for your children to explore. Mix learning with fun at The Georgia State Railroad Museum or explore Old Fort Jackson and Fort Pulaski. Cool down at Tybee Island for paddle boarding or a day at the beach.

    Charleston, SC

    Distance: 204 miles; Average Travel Time: 3 hours 15 minutes

    One of the top day trips from Spartanburg, SC is Charleston! Like Savannah, Charleston can help you turn your vacation into an educational experience with the various Plantations, Patriots Point Naval and Maritime Museum, The Children’s Museum of the Lowcountry, and Fort Sumter. The South Carolina Aquarium is also located in Charleston so you can check out the marine life while you are close to the coast. Speaking of the coast, Kiawah, Isle of Palms, Sullivan’s Island, Folly Beach, and Edisto Beach give you plenty of options if you want to put your toes in the sand.

    Travel Guide to Charleston, South Carolina

    Atlanta, GA

    Distance: 181 miles; Average Travel Time: 3 hours

    Being one of the larger cities close to the Upstate, Atlanta has plenty to do with the family to keep you busy from the time you arrive, right up to the moment you head home. At only 3 hours from Greenville and Spartanburg, it’s worth the adventure. You can check out the awesome Georgia Aquarium, or get in touch with nature by visiting Atlanta Botanical Garden, Inc or Centennial Olympic Park- which includes a splash fountain, picnic areas, and open fields to let your little ones burn off some energy.

    If your family is seeking thrills, head over to Six Flags Over Georgia. Legoland Discovery Center Atlanta offers rides, a 4-D movie, and themed play areas for the Lego lovers. You can visit the World of Coca-Cola, or visit the animals at Zoo Atlanta.

    Charlotte, NC

    Distance: 77 miles; Average Travel Time: 1 hour 30 minutes

    Charlotte, North Carolina may be a city that you drive up to on any given Saturday to spend the day with your family, but why not turn it into a vacation? With plenty to do to keep you busy, it isn’t difficult to fill up your vacation itinerary. Discovery Place is full of fun, interactive activities for the kids.

    Head over to Carowinds one day for some theme park action, or, for the real thrill seekers, go whitewater rafting at U.S. National Whitewater Center. Nascar lovers can visit the Nascar Hall of Fame. Want to spend your vacation swimming and going down water slides? Great Wolf Lodge is a great place for some water fun, right at your hotel!

    Things to Do in Charlotte, NC

    Myrtle Beach, SC

    Distance: 239 miles; Average Travel Time: 4 hours

    Probably one of the most visited beaches for residents of the Upstate, Myrtle Beach has plenty of reasons people keep going back. This beach has a lot more to offer than waves and sand for families with children. Family Kingdom Amusement Park offers plenty of fun, and even looks extra cool at night when it’s all lit up! You can also check out the Ripley’s Aquarium where you can meet and greet with penguins, head to Medieval Times for an epic dinner, or enjoy a pirate showdown at Pirates Voyage.

    Love the outdoors? Check out Huntington Beach State Park while you are visiting, and maybe you will catch a glimpse of an alligator!

    If you don’t stay in one of the many hotels that offer their own mini water park, you can visit Myrtle Waves Water Park if you want to cool off in something other than salt water. Wonderworks, the Hollywood Wax Museum, and miniature golf are just a few other attractions you can soak in along with the beautiful coastal South Carolina sun.

    Travel Guide to Coastal SC: Myrtle Beach

    Washington, D.C

    Distance: 472 miles; Average Travel Time: 7 hours 30 minutes

    This destination may be more suitable for families with older children. We’ve talked about educational vacations, and what place is more historically educational than our nation’s capital? Check out our Guide to Washington, DC to help you plan out a trip.

    The White House, a plethora of memorials and monuments, museums galore, art galleries, and the National Zoological Park– you may not be able to take it all in with just one trip. Six Flags America in Maryland is only a 30-minute drive from Washington, D.C., so you can break up your site-seeing with some thrill rides.

    Gatlinburg/Pigeon Forge, TN

    Distance: 145 miles; Average Travel Time: 2 hours 45 minutes

    Not only are residents of the Upstate fairly close to beaches and larger cities, we are right next to the beautiful Great Smoky Mountains. You can book a hotel in the area, but a great way to experience the mountains is with a cabin rental. 

    Cabins of the Smoky Mountains has a huge selection of cabin rentals, ranging from one to 12 bedrooms. Most of the cabins are equipped with a jacuzzi and games, such as pool, air hockey, pinball, and even ping pong. Smoky Hollow Outdoor Resort is another great lodging option near Gatlinburg, TN, in addition to Wilderness at the Smokies, Greystone Lodge, or Westgate Smoky Mountain Resort. We have stayed at these four locations, and highly recommend each for various reasons.

    Theme park lovers will want to head over to Dollywood, which has plenty of rides for children, as well as thrill rides and shows. You’ll also find Anakeeta in Gatlinburg, which offers sky-high views, unique exhibits, and even great dining, all in one place.

    Get in touch with nature with hiking trails, zip lines, and whitewater rafting. The heart of Pigeon Forge is a long street filled with different things to do, such as go-karting, miniature golf, and arcades.

    You can find more Pigeon Forge and Gatlinburg Attractions in our comprehensive guide.

    Pigeon Forge and Gatlinburg Family Guide

    Lake Lure, NC

    Distance: 49 miles; Average Travel Time: 1 hour

    Lake Lure is a fantastic place to spend a week during the summertime. This is a great vacation spot if you want a more relaxing experience while keeping the kids entertained. Lake Lure is a large man-made lake, and even in the hottest months of the summer, the water stays at refreshing temperatures.

    To really get a great full-week experience, rent a house for the week. Renting a house allows you to experience true lake-living, and will also help you save money by being able to cook your meals and not have to eat out three times a day. You and your family can swim, canoe, kayak, paddle boat, or rent a pontoon boat to spend the day on the lake, literally.

    Bring the kids to Lake Lure Beach and Water Park– a sandy mountain beach with a splash area and a water slide. Then, head over to the stunning Flowering Bridge to check out the fairy tale world of plants.


    Drive a Little Further for an Epic Trip: Florida!

    St. Augustine, FL

    Distance: 415 miles; Average Travel Time: 6 hours 15 minutes

    Talk about an education, but fun, family vacation! St. Augustine is the oldest city in the United States. Not only is this city filled with history, but the beach is right there as well! At Marineland Dolphin Adventure, you and your family can view dolphin habitats, check out sea turtles and sand tiger sharks, and even swim with the dolphins.

    St. Augustine Alligator Farm Zoological Park is filled with alligators and a bird exhibit. Potter’s Wax Museum includes characters from Star Wars, famous historic figures, and pop icons. You kids will love the St. Augustine Pirate Museum as well. Castillo de San Marcos, the oldest stone fortress in the continental United States, is both fun to explore and educational, not to mention the awesome views from the top.

    Walt Disney World Resort

    Distance: 536 miles; Average Travel Time: 8 hours

    This may be pushing the limits, as Disney is something usually well planned out, as it is nothing short of expensive. Eight hours is a long time in the car with children, but leaving early in the morning will get you there well before dinner time. With the cost of Disney park tickets rising annually, making the trip by car is one way to save some extra dough.

    If you haven’t taken your children to Disney World, but have been thinking about it, don’t think any longer. It is well worth it. Everything about it truly is ‘magical,’ as they say, and it won’t be an experience your children, or you, forget any time soon. Disney resorts may push the budget, but that doesn’t mean you can’t experience Disney without breaking the bank. Lake Buena Vista, FL (which is the city on Disney World’s self-addressed envelope) has a huge variety of different hotels at a very affordable rate.

    Most of the hotels surrounding Disney World cater specifically to tourists visiting Orlando to go to Disney. Many offer free shuttle services to and from the park, saving you from paying high parking prices. Plus, you don’t need to stay on Disney property to experience some of the benefits the resorts offer. You are also welcome to dine at any of the resorts (advanced reservations highly recommended).

    If you are determined to stay at a Disney resort, they offer ‘Value’ resorts, which are priced similar to hotels that aren’t on Disney property. The Value resorts do not look budget at all! Orlando Resort Rentals at University Boulevard is highly rated and is near both Disney World and Universal Studios. You will also find affordable rates at Magic Village Views Trademark Collection, which is even close to fun activities outside of Disney like the Blizzard Beach Water Park.

    Bonus: If you’re headed to Orlando with a LEGO fan, you might want to check out LEGOLAND!

    Where is your family’s favorite vacation spot within a day’s drive?

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    Erika Morelli

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  • What’s happening this month in Spartanburg?

    What’s happening this month in Spartanburg?

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    Are you looking for things to do in Spartanburg, SC? These are the events happening in Spartanburg now. Find events in Spartanburg this weekend, or plan things to do in all month long.

    The post Things to Do This Month in Spartanburg, SC appeared first on Kidding Around Greenville.

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    Maria Bassett

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  • “How Hardcore Feminist Punk Rock Unlocked My AuDHD Brain”

    “How Hardcore Feminist Punk Rock Unlocked My AuDHD Brain”

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    I have always had a strong connection and pull to music, gaining inspiration from trailblazing female artists like Stevie Nicks and Joni Mitchell. But my relationship with music reached another level when I – during a moral burnout episode – stumbled upon a different kind of sound that changed my understanding of my AuDHD brain.

    In my field of work, I see injustices often. My hyper-empathy and strong sense of justice drew me to this field, an area that gave me just the right amount of dopamine to help me manage well enough for many years – until things became really difficult and the stress and sadness mounted. I knew that my neurodivergent brain was making everything feel much more intense, but I wasn’t sure how to pull it all back.

    One afternoon at home, burnt out, I knew I absolutely needed to clean my home despite a distinct lack of energy. I thought music would help, but this time, rather than put on Stevie Nicks, I selected a playlist at random and tried to power on. After a short time, I found myself dancing to the post punk rhythms of Siouxsie and the Banshees. My energy levels were up, and I suddenly gained the ability to do all the mundane demands I hadn’t been able to tackle for weeks.

    Stumbling Into Punk Rock: A New Special Interest

    I fell down a rabbit hole searching for more music that I thought might have the same effect. Cue my discovery of Riot Grrrl, grunge bands created by women, and feminist hardcore punk. In an instant, my world (and ears) became full of early ’90s bands like Babes in Toyland and Bikini Kill to more recent groups like War on Women, Lambrini Girls, and others with names too explicit to share.

    Bands made up of women who fight for their voices to be heard, stay true to themselves, and don’t seem to care if they’re disliked? I had entered in to special-interest territory. I became absorbed in learning about the music, the women, and the culture they were promoting. At a time when I felt isolated and insecure and like I was losing a big part of my identity through my troubles at work, this music brought me joy and validation. It filled me with energy that I hadn’t felt for a long time and listening to it became the best and most important part of my day.

    [Read: 13 Productivity Playlists to Center and Focus ADHD Brains]

    Aside from the physical release of endless dancing, I found that the louder the music and vocals, the happier and calmer I felt. Any stress I was feeling reduced, and overwhelming thoughts about my inability to do something turned into figuring out how I could.

    I decided to experiment with listening to something much louder. Inspired by the death and thrash metal gigs I attended in my early 20s, I found myself – now more than 10 years later – on my way, alone, to see a few hardcore punk bands at a DIY venue 50 miles away. I’d never been to a gig by myself, let alone one like this, and it gave me a buzz that ADHD just loves to pull me toward.

    The evening of the gig, as I stood in the middle of the crowd and listened to the thrashing music, I experienced something I’d never experienced before: a quiet mind with no thoughts in my head. Peace. My mind was blown. Literally.

    The Soothing Sounds of Hardcore Punk

    I spent the next few months tracking the effects of this music on my feelings and behaviors and was amazed by the results. I found that I didn’t need as much sleep and was able to be active late into the night. I wasn’t as drawn to sugar and carbs. Overstimulation after a long day in the office was easier to tolerate, and moments of excruciating under-stimulation were few and far between. My ability to tolerate perceived rejection and criticism grew significantly. This music, it was clear, was making everything so enjoyable.

    [Read: Music Therapy – Sound Medicine for ADHD]

    This was not a life I was used to. It was something I had only experienced in short bursts. But here was punk music, my new special interest, giving me all the dopamine I needed to thrive. It was helping me behave in ways that were right for me, rather than being influenced by my barriers and my fears.

    How do I use my special interest now to get the results I need? When I need a quick surge of chemicals to get me moving after waking up, Babes in Toyland’s Bluebell works every time. When I need to sleep, I’ll blast my thoughts away with Petrol Girls. When I’m feeling anxious or fearful at work and need to be brave, Double Dare Ya by Bikini Kill transforms my attitude and reminds me of my values. For those moments when I desperately need inner calm, I find it – in a raging hardcore gig.

    AuDHD and Music: Next Steps


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    Nathaly Pesantez

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