Fatherhood is an evolving role. The traditional role of the dad going off to work while mom stays home taking care of the kids has become less the standard today. Far more typical, is having both parents going off to work. So, it is not enough for dads to just bring home a paycheck, with mom doing that too. Dads need be more engaged and play an active role in their children’s development. This change has to do predominantly with a shift in our societal and cultural expectations of what a father’s role should be, as well as a desire from dads to have more involvement with the family.

When dad becomes an increasingly engaged and active partner, it benefits both moms and the children.

1. Sharing the Workload
Probably one of the most significant and welcome changes for moms is having someone else who can step in to lend a hand with some of the less pleasurable aspects of parenting. The day-to-day drudgery of picking up after the kids, changing diapers, doing laundry, cleaning the house, doing dishes, bathing the baby, getting up in the middle of the night for feedings, making dinner—I’m getting tired just listing them. Clearly, it’s just a little bit easier when there are two people sharing the chores. Maybe even mom can even get a chance to catch a few more Z’s or imagine this: do something nice for herself.

2. Understanding What It Takes
As dads help out more, or even take over the role of primary caregiver, there is a real understanding of how much work it really is. For the longest time, I believe most men have been blissfully ignorant, knowingly or not, of how much work and how exhausting it is taking care of the kids. Honestly, I had no idea how painfully tiring and mind numbing it could be until I had my own kids, and I became the primary caregiver. I had a corporate job most of my life and nothing compares to the work of caring for kids! It is not a nine to six workday—it never seems to end. I tell people that as a new parent I experienced a new level of exhaustion—one that is both physical and mental. So, all to say that it’s a good thing for dads to understand what moms have doing for decades—working their butts off.

3. Well Rounded Development
Studies have shown a correlation between dads’ involvement with their children and those children developing more resilience, higher self-worth, and increased sociability, confidence, and self-control. There is also a benefit of having two parents involved with the kids, as they see different opinions and personalities and how they can work together. Having parents with varied strengths, weaknesses, and points of view helps children grow up to be more well-rounded.

4. Expand Definition of Masculinity
Another positive to having a well-balanced role for dads is in its ability to show children a broader spectrum of male masculinity. A real man can do housework, comfort his kids, and even show affection to his children by hugging and kissing them. This also helps children to learn what a healthy relationship looks like, so when they grow up they will have the right expectation of what a well-balanced, strong, independent man looks and acts like.

5. Education
There is evidence of babies with higher IQs, improved language ability, and communication skills when dads are actively involved in caring for and playing with their babies. This academic boost continues for children as dad stays involved in their early school education, resulting in improved academic achievements.

Although there is still a lot of progress to be made, things are moving in a direction that is good for everyone.

—Stephen Gross is an award-winning designer who has received numerous honors for his work in advertising, branding, and retail. He is author of The Simplest Baby Book in the World. He lives with his husband, Vincent, in Los Angeles with their two adorable children, who are now ages two and three.

Stephen Gross is an award-winning designer who has received numerous honors for his work in advertising, branding, and retail. He is author of The Simplest Baby Book in the World. He lives with his husband, Vincent, in Los Angeles with their two adorable children, who are now ages two and three.

There’s nothing quite like potty training that brings a whole new kind of stress to a parent’s life. From pull-up diapers to potty seats and positive reinforcement, every parent is looking for just the right tool to help their little one master this important milestone of child development. Baby born Surprise has introduced its latest doll, Magic Potty Surprise, which helps you teach your little one how to go to the potty on a real potty.

Baby born Surprise dolls are adorable and lifelike babies and pets. Each one is full of surprises, and they give kids the experience of caring for a lifelike "baby" through activities like bathing, diaper changing and now potty training. Magic Potty makes potty training magical because your kiddo can learn to potty train while she teaches her Magical Potty Surprise doll to potty train at the same time.

Your little one will love taking care of her Baby born Surprise Magical Potty Surprise doll. She can feed her doll her real doll food, then give her toddler doll water from her sippy cup, help her doll sit on the potty and then discover the doll peed colorful, sparkly glitter pee. And when she adds a Potty Pod to the potty, after giving her water and sitting her on the potty, she’ll discover her doll has “pooped” a magical charm. Magical Potty Surprise doll comes with more than 30 magical surprises, and a charm bracelet that your little one can proudly add charms to and wear.

Magical Potty Surprise comes with 9 doll food packets, 10 potty pods with surprise charms, a plate, spoon, sippy cup, potty, hairbrush, charm bracelet and a pacifier. And she has beautiful hair that your kiddo will love brushing, and a cute outfit and shoes. After all, fashion is important when baby is potty training!

Make potty training an exciting time in your little one’s life. Click here to buy the Baby born Surprise Magic Potty Surprise.

—Leah R. Singer

In the 90s virtual pets were all the rage. We could never imagine how these types of toys would foreshadow our future in the digital age. Now GigaPets is making a comeback in a big way. 

GigaPets

This summer, GigaPets is proud to announce three new releases: GigaPetsAR, GigaPets Trolls and GigaPets Pixie. These new styles include all the features from their 90’s predecessors with tons of fun and exciting upgrades like augmented reality, more advanced game play and evolutions and fun additions to the housings like wings, limbs and hair. 

 

GigaPets AR

GigaPets

 

Choose between a Puppy, Unicorn, or a T-Rex. Experience full pet responsibilities including feeding, putting it to sleep, cleaning and bathing, taking it to the doctor, teaching it tricks, and discipline. Includes retro themed tinted transparent shells, better graphics and game play than in the 90’s, upgraded hardware, and an extended battery life.

The free augmented reality app lets you experience your pet in 3D augmented reality. Complete activities on your GigaPets device to unlock screens which can be scanned to reveal special animations on your phone.The app also includes all the classic GigaPets features like feeding, cleaning, playing games and more so that you get two games for the  price of one.

 

GigaPets Trolls

 

GigaPets

Go on fun adventures with your new virtual friend, but whatever you do, try and avoid the barber. Every day the Troll’s hair will grow longer, but if you neglect it, those crazy locks will be cut and you will drop back down to day one. Don’t worry though your friend will always bounce back because Trolls never die. 

 

Two of the games (avoid the barber and jump the hurdles) can be accessed at any time. Keep your Troll happy and healthy to unlock 3 additional games (skateboarding, surfing, and mountain climbing) which get harder as you progress. Each device also comes with a set of possible limbs to help them stand up on their own and a full set of hair for added play value.

 

GigaPets Pixie

 

This is the most advanced GigaPets ever with 8 different evolutions to experience. In this game magic and the choices you make help determine your outcome. Additionally, each Pixie also includes a set of rubber wings and antenna for a more tactile experience. 

Choose from 4 different games that get harder as you progress. Collect elements such as clovers dew, seeds and fireflies by successfully casting spells and playing games. Use those elements to brew potions which will help your Pixie grow and determine their evolution path.

GigaPets will be available on Amazon and launching Summer 2020 at Target Stores nationwide.

—Jennifer Swartvagher

All photos courtesy of GigaPets

RELATED STORIES

Tamagotchi ON Wonder Garden Is Available for Preorder at Walmart

Bilingual Teddy Bears Help Kids Learn a New Language

LEGO & Nintendo Reveal Full Product Line for the New Super Mario Play Experience

Spending time indoors doesn’t mean kids have to be bored, rather it gives them a chance to explore their imaginations. Baby Born Surprise, with its nurturing baby dolls that are ready for feeding, bathing and diapering, are packed with surprises and perfect for supplying kids with hours of imagination and story time fun.

Baby Born Surprise dolls are lifelike babies and pets. They’re super cute and full of surprises, and kids can have the experience of caring for a baby through activities like bathing and diaper changing. We know that kids love to play with baby dolls, and Baby Born Surprise takes that playtime to a new imaginative level by adding in surprises and fantastical details.

There are tons of different Baby Born Surprise sets. Here’s a look at three of the most popular ones.

Baby Born Surprise Bottle House Playset — Little ones will never be bored as they play with their Baby Born Surprise small dolls and pets in the Bottle House Playset. This playset is one of a kind, because it’s the only adorable playset out there that’s designed for small, collectible baby dolls. It has several interactive play areas for the dolls, including a crib, nursery, changing table and a working bathtub that actually sprays water. It can also be closed and used as storage for the Baby Born Surprise dolls and pets. This playset comes with an exclusive Baby Born Surprise doll whose hair actually changes color.

Baby Born Surprise Dolls — Your kiddo will love their little doll that is so detailed and adorable. Each doll has so many fun features like drinking from bottle, going to the bathroom, a color-changing diaper and eye color reveal. Dolls are bundled in the cutest swaddles, and come with a bottle and pacifier. Every doll has more than 10 surprises to reveal. Kids will never be bored discovering all of them.

Baby Born Surprise Pets — Every doll (and their owner) needs to have a pet! Baby Born Surprise pets have a fun and dramatic color change feature. Kids can give their pets a bath and even see the pet change into an entirely different animal. Each pet comes bundled in cute swaddles with a keychain hook, and a little pet towel and bathtub. Each pet has more than eight surprises to reveal.

With Baby Born Surprise, your kiddo will be entertained and using their imagination for hours. Check out the website for free printable coloring and game activity sheets.

Create the perfect Easter bundle gift for your daughter with the Baby Born Surprise Bottle House Playset and a few Baby Born Surprise Dolls and Pets! Buy them online now!

—Leah R. Singer

Photo: Heller Family Photo

I admit to having been jealous of my friends whose babies could be put to bed awake, parents walking away and closing the door, and baby sleeping for 6 or 8 or 10 hours (or simply sleeping!). I felt for my friends who tried to ‘sleep train’ but whose babies couldn’t regulate. I empathized with my friends who co-slept especially if not by choice. We were in some middle ground of sorts—not cosleeping, not crying it out, but not able to leave the room until our boys were so sound asleep that they couldn’t detect the vibrations of our exit. It was exhausting. And yet it was extraordinary. 

Bedtime was a series of extended rituals: bathing, reading, singing, nursing, rocking, more singing. Over time, the routine morphed into their choice of storybooks (one for each) and songs, requesting who would read (mom or dad—usually it was dad with his fun character voices), deciding where they’d lay down (their own beds separately or with each other on one). Before they were talking, they used sign language to make these requests and to engage with us, and as they continued to grow, bedtime became the time they told us the most about their day or their desires or their worries. They asked questions. The conversations were deep and significant. The dreaded bedtime became a welcome time together, even special. 

In October the Hearty Soul posted an article indicating that laying down with your kids at night is not a bad habit. They talk about Attachment Parenting (AP), but it’s not as exclusive as that. I don’t consider myself to have been in the tight AP circles so to speak, but I do agree with the philosophy of continuing to deepen the parent/child bond as they grow up. I strongly believe that the time with my kids at night was one of the things that led to healthy attachment and independence. 

My kids grew up in the city, so they learned to navigate the subways and more; they developed street smarts; they became independent and felt empowered to do so. They were different kids, though. Despite the same sleep-time needs, one was ready to travel on his own around town at a younger age than the other, but they did it on their own time and did it very well. I also appreciated that my younger son, even at 18, still liked to say good night in person, at his bedside (and he was able to fall asleep on his own!). 

Every family should feel comfortable with their own routines and choices. It’s important not to feel pressured by other parents and families but to do the research and make informed choices for yourselves. Most of all, listen to your child. Sure, kids can be manipulative, I know, but there’s usually a reason for it; they’re also teaching you something about them and their needs right from day one. And eventually, they won’t want you around as much (in my opinion) so take it while you can!

 

Lora Heller is a music therapist, Deaf educator, and author of several sign language books for kids. She has also written for music therapy professional publications and national parenting magazines and is the on-line expert for various parenting programs including ParentsTV.com baby sign language video series. Lora founded Baby Fingers in 2000. www.mybabyfingers.com 

Does your baby struggle to drift off to dreamland? If so, you aren’t alone. A recent survey of 500 U.K. and 500 U.S. parents by Sleep Junkie found that parents spend an average of five hours and 25 minutes a day getting their babies to sleep.

With a little basic math, those five hours and 25 minutes per day equals roughly 82 days a year. That’s 82 days lost to bedtime-based activities such as feeding, walking, driving, reading, bathing and burping.

photo: Dominika Roseclay via Pexels 

Sleep Junkie broke down the data into how much time parents report spending on each get-ready-for-bedtime activity, with feeding coming in at first place (one hours and 46 minutes per day).

The second highest time-suck was walking at one hour and 21 minutes––that’s a grand total of 4.23 miles per day! Driving followed in third with parents driving an average of 41 minutes, or 20 miles, per day just to get junior to sleep.

Other time spent engaging in bedtime activities included 34 minutes on reading, 29 minutes on bathing and 24 minutes on burping.

—Erica Loop

 

RELATED STORIES

Here’s What the Experts Have to Say about Your Child’s Heavy Backpack

New Poll Sheds Light On How Much the Tooth Fairy Is Willing to Give

New Research Sheds Light On Long-Term Effects of Time-Outs

5 Ways to Support a Friend Returning to Work After Maternity Leave

Photo: Pixabay

Returning to work after maternity leave is an exciting time for some, but a stressful and sad time for others.  I remember my first day back to work after maternity leave.  I took my son to the sitter’s house, got into my car and bawled like a baby. While I liked my team and was happy to be returning to my corporate strategy role, I was heartbroken to be leaving my little guy with someone else.

Fast forward to today and I’ve successfully navigated my own maternity leaves, coached clients returning from leave and supported countless friends through the process.  While there are many things you can do to support a friend who’s returning to work, there are five key things that will make a big difference for her.

1. Offer to help around her house.

She may not be able to to envision what she needs, but trust me, the transition from being home with baby to going back to the office is tough.  If she’s like most moms on leave, she’s doing the lion’s share of the household duties, including cooking, laundry, and running errands.  By the end of maternity leave, many moms have developed a new set of habits and routines that are predicated on her being home and having control over her schedule.  Showering, doing laundry or quickly preparing a meal while the baby is napping have become part of her routine.

A rude awakening comes on that first day back to work.  Gone are the days of taking a shower at noon or a nap at 4 pm if she had a rough night with the baby.  Now, she’s having to get up, get herself work ready, get the baby ready for a sitter or daycare and get out of the door early in the morning. She likely returns home that evening tired and desperate to spend some quality time bathing and bonding with her baby before the little one heads to bed.  The flexibility she had during maternity leave has disappeared over night.  Offer to stock groceries in the house, bring over prepared meals, process some laundry or send a cleaning service.

2. Be a good listener.

Returning to work is often fraught with emotions. She is simultaneously recalibrating the division of labor with her spouse or partner, spending less time with her baby and juggling being a mom with her work responsibilities.  Each of these can be tough.  She may not ask for help, but will appreciate it.  Call to check on her and listen. She will need to vent at times and process emotions.  Offer advice where you can, but what’s more important is that you are there for her.

3. Give her small gifts to take to work.

Small gifts to brighten her space and make her feel special are appreciated. Framed pictures of her baby for her desk, accessories to make pumping at work easier or flowers and an encouraging note can bring her joy.  Once the baby shower has passed and after friends have brought the new baby gifts, the attention that the family — and especially the mom — receives will dwindle.  Small tokens of support and appreciation will be unexpected and go a long way.

4. Buy, loan and recommend work clothes.

If she has to wear professional clothes to work, getting back into her work clothes — especially if she’s pumping — can be stressful and, for some, demoralizing.  If you have clothes you can lend her, great.  If not, researching and purchasing pump-friendly work clothes can be a game changer for her.

5. Get her out of the house.

Once the reality of juggling work and her new baby sets in, your friend may find it difficult to make time for herself.  Take her for a walk or out for coffee. She’ll appreciate the support and the break from her new routine.

Your friend’s journey to juggling working motherhood is a long and fruitful one. Being a great source of support during her early days will be remembered and appreciated for years to come.

– Julie Finn for Fairygodboss

Fairygodboss Georgene Huang & Romy Newman, Founders
Tinybeans Voices Contributor

As the largest career community for women, Fairygodboss provides millions of women with career connections, community advice and the hard-to-find intel about how companies treat women.

If you think life for teens has changed since you were one, you’re not wrong. New research shows how teens spend their time and things are definitely different.

A new Pew Research Center survey has found that the way teens spend their time has shifted in the past decade. The biggest changes were found in the amount of time teens spent doing homework and sleeping. On average, teens spent an hour a day doing homework, up from 44 minutes 10 years ago and just half an hour in the 1990s. Teens today also spent more time sleeping with an average of over nine and a half hours of sleep a night, a 22-minute increase over teens a decade ago.

photo: Alexis Brown via Unsplash

Teens report having an average of five hours and 44 minutes of leisure time daily, a major chunk of that is spent on screens. No surprise. Teens clock an average of three hours and four minutes of screen time daily. This has held steady for the last decade, but what has changed is how teens spend the remainder of that free time.

If you had an after school job, chances are your own teen won’t. Teens are spending less time on paid jobs during the school year at just 26 minutes a day, on average, versus 57 minutes in the mid-1990s, which reflects the fact that fewer teens are working in general. Teens are also spending less time on social activities like going to parties, sporting events or concerts dropping 16 minutes per day on average in the last ten years.

One thing that has remained the same is that there is a difference in the way girls and boys spend their time. Girls devote more of their day to homework and grooming activities, like haircuts, bathing and getting dressed. Boys spend more time on leisure activities, including screen time, and sports on average. Girls and boys also report feeling differently about their days. While girls are more likely to say they feel nervous or stressed about their day, they are also more likely to say that they feel excited about it.

—Shahrzad Warkentin

 

RELATED STORIES

New Study Finds Teens Worry about This the Most. Here’s What Parents Can Do

How to Build Trust with Your Tween (That Will Last Through the Teenage Years)

This Genius Teen Basically Paid for a Year of College in 4 Days—by Clearing Snow

If you’ve got a prickly pet at home, you’re going to want to cool it with the pet PDA. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued a warning about hedgehogs that surprisingly has nothing to do with those sharp quills.

After a multi-state salmonella outbreak, the CDC is putting out an APB against kissing hedgehogs. Ten out of 11 patients infected during the recent outbreak reported having contact with a hedgehog. Although these prickly pets are popular, they still pose a health risk and should be handled with care.

photo: amayaeguizabal via Pixabay

Hedgehogs can carry salmonella bacteria without appearing sick themselves—and easily spread it around. The CDC says it’s important to always wash your hands after handling your hedgehog and to always keep them out of the kitchen. Avoid bathing your hedgehog in the kitchen sink and bringing them into your bed. Keep their toys and cage clean.

If all else fails, get a dog instead ;)

—Shahrzad Warkentin

 

RELATED STORIES:

Which Chicken Nuggets Have Been Recalled? There Are 3 Active Recalls Right Now

General Mills Recalls Gold Medal Flour Nationwide for Salmonella Risk

We Can All Eat Romaine Lettuce Now, CDC Says