When it comes to little girls and easy hairstyles, more often than not, the responsibilities are relegated to moms. But there’s no reason why dads can’t be in charge of whipping up a spectacular ‘do, too. Whether you’re a first-time hairstylist or a seasoned hairbrush pro, there are plenty of inspirational and instructional hair tutorials online that can teach virtually any dad how to become a hairstyling pro. Read on to view some of our favorite dad/daughter videos below. 

8 Easy Styles Any Dad Can Do

This video includes eight different styles, including braided ponytails, buns with braids and more. Be sure to order ponytail holders before you get started!

Low Pigtail Braids

Perfect for a bike ride, or a day at school, Daddy Daughter Hair Factory can show you how to perfect the low pigtail braid hairstyle. Don't forget the wet brush for tangles!

Easy Styles That Take Little Time

"Maddy and Daddy" bring you some easy hairstyles like a ponytail, twist bun and pigtails that you can totally pull off. 

Braided Buns, Top knots, and Princess Ringlets

With more than 1 million followers on Instagram, Mike Worthington and his daughter Asia have become such a viral sensation with their fun online hair and fashion tutorials that they've taken their show on the road with a Daddy Does Hair roadshow!

The Daddy Sock Bun

Featured on DadsDoHair.com, a Facebook community that features real dads giving instructional videos on quick and advanced hairstyles for other dads (and moms) looking to learn to do with their daughter's hair, this video shows an ingenious use of an old sock to create a beautiful hair bun.

Simple Fishtail Braid

Bryan Leffew is a stay-at-home dad who has been doing his daughter Selena's hair since she was a baby. In this video, Bryan practices a simple braid for one of Selena's upcoming performances at school

Spinning Hair Bun

War veteran and police officer Manny Colon offers up a novel approach to creating the perfect hair bun for his daughter Lily. Hint: it doesn't involve a vacuum cleaner, but it doesn't require some fancy footwork from Lily.

Slicked-Back High Ponytail

This father has a rather interesting way to create the perfect high ponytail on his daughter. Ta-da!

Flip-Through Ponytail

Entrepreneur Mark Peters offers some helpful, pain-free hints on how to transform a low ponytail into a flip-through pony.

Double Hair Buns With Diagonal Parts

Breeze_N_Dad's YouTube channel and Instagram page feature plenty of simple and lovely hair styles that most dads can do for their daughters, including this adorable double hair buns with diagonal parts style. Having a comb will help perfect the part.

Toddler Pigtail Braids

Dad does his baby girl's hair, with guidance from mom.

Dutch Braid

As a single dad, Philippe Morgese taught himself how to do his daughter Emma's hair. What began as father-daughter bonding turned into Daddy Daughter Hair Factory, a popular Facebook community and live workshops that teach other dads how to do their daughters' hair.

Three Easy Hairstyles

Filmmaker Steven Miranda shows three easy hairstyles that any dad can do.

Dealing With Thick Hair

Dad Olu offers up easy tips for kids with thick hair, just like his adorable daughter Kemi. Find out more about this adorable duo by clicking here.

— Kipp Jarecke-Cheng

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Feature photo: Gift Habeshaw via Unsplash

My phone is no longer mine. Has this happened to anyone else? Perhaps this is how my own mother felt when she picked up the wall-mounted phone with the cord that could reach any room in the house, only to hear my voice chatting away with a friend. Remember those days? When we all shared one home phone? As a child, I would frequently visit a friend whose mother lived on her phone. I would wait and wait to make a call to my parents to ask for a ride home. These days, as a ten-year-old, I would probably have my own cell phone. I would text my mom and Uber home. Sadly, even though I am now a woman who is far closer to 40 than to 30, I am still waiting to use the phone.

This phenomenon of gradual takeover is not limited to my phone, and I am convinced that it is not limited to me. Quick poll – how many of you have lost one of the following to your child…or pet…or partner (comment on the post below):

  • Bathroom privacy
  • Hairbrush
  • Kitchen (now in near-fulltime use by one of your children intent on becoming a sous chef by age 10)
  • Bedroom privacy
  • Bed
  • Hidden candy stash (surely I am not the only one with this, right? Help a girl out here!)

But until recently, my phone was sacrosanct. My island in a sea of concessions. The home of my Instagram account, my text messages, and my contacts. My husband and I are Gen Xers floundering our way through a world filled with TikTok, Snapchat, and Twitter (we have accounts on none of these). We adore our screens and simultaneously despise them. They allow us to reach the world, but they also allow the world to reach us. We have tried to comb through as much of the latest parenting advice and pediatric research available on the use of screens by young children. After these sessions, we leave convinced that children both need their own phone and should never be allowed to use their own phone. Definitely not in their bedroom, not without filters, not after 10 pm, not unsupervised, not with anyone we do not know. And yet, having a phone builds independence, resilience, and technological savvy. Our heads spin.

Grasping at any kind of number, we settled on age 13 as a good age to bestow these technological wonders upon our progeny. I know – gasp! – how could they possibly wait that long?! What kind of parents ARE they? This post is not intended to be an essay on the benefits of “waiting till 8” (as in eighth grade) or any other program for managing children’s screen time. I tell you this number only to explain that none of our children have a phone because none of them are 13…yet. However, the age restriction has not stopped them from using my phone ALL. THE. TIME.

It began with daily SportsCenter checks, courtesy of our oldest. It followed with text messages and phone calls from the friends of our two oldest children. And then, the COVID-19 pandemic hit. The world changed, and so did my phone. While on lockdown, my phone acquired Zoom, Duo, Meet, Marco Polo, and countless other apps that allowed my children to connect with their friends. All of our family, my husband and I included, were longing for meaningful connections with friends. So, I arranged Zoom meetings for my kids, then my phone began to disappear for hours as they shared Marco Polo videos back and forth with their friends. Just last week, a FaceTime call came through on my phone. I was excited. Then I answered. “Hello, Mrs. Morris, we wanted to FaceTime [(our son)] while we all played Fortnite.” Sigh.

Even though my teeth grind and I am frequently exasperated because my phone has “walked off” again, my heart is ultimately full. My kids and I are sharing. We are learning to co-exist, to set boundaries, and to think of each other first. Because of my phone, I am involved in my kids’ lives. I know their friends and their habits, their favorite apps and which photos they have taken. Sharing my phone may be difficult, but it is rewarding; it builds another layer of connection between us.

Tomorrow, when my notifications pop up with yet another Polo from “sisters4ever,” my heart will smile as I hand my phone to my pre-teen daughter. I am sharing the phone with my family, 2020 st‌yle.

Scientist by training, lover of books and writing and learning by nature. Wife to a talented husband, mom of three children. Proud to call the Rocket City home (Huntsville, Alabama). Pursuing my love of creative writing by writing about everything from school buses to the latest in pandemic schooling.

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

There have been way too many times that we have left the house and I have forgotten one crucial item. It tends to be the most critical item that we need and there it is, left at home. Have you read the book, Checklist Manifesto? A diaper bag requires a checklist because there are too many things that baby needs and are so easy to forget.

The tricky thing is that we need to pack each time we go out, right? We use all the things like outfits, diapers, bottles but it’s the replenishing that causes me to forget an item. (That and my current state of sleep deprivation.) So, I’m making a list here as much for me as it is to share. Now if only someone could help me pack suitcases for a family of five.

 

So here it goes, this is my list for one newborn baby. The best way for me to remember all items is to think in categories: diapering, feeding, mom, all others/siblings.

Diapering

  • Changing pad 
  • Wipes
  • Diaper cream
  • 6 diapers
  • 2 Changes of clothes

Feeding 

  • Bottles, with breast milk or water and formula 
  • Thermos packed with hot water to warm bottles on the go
  • Nursing cover and if needed nipple shield, lanolin, etc
  • Burp cloth, I love the flannel ones 
  • Pacifier 

Mom

  • Wallet, keys, glasses, etc
  • Change of shirt, I keep a basic grey v-neck bc you never know
  • Chapstick, gum, I don’t know but things you’d put in your purse
  • Sanitizing wipes, lotion

All others

  • Toy for baby or sibling
  • Phone charger if needed
  • Blanket or muslin

The diaper bag evolves as the baby gets older and needs less or different things. Also, I used to carry a larger duffle bag style when we had two children under two and thus had two different size diapers and clothes to remember to pack. Oh, those days were exhausting. 

It is important to remember to get your items like your wallet (!) when the weekend is over, for example, and you are headed to work for the week. I’ve been without my wallet on a few occasions because it’s left in the diaper bag. Oops!

And the worst thing I ever forgot? Formula at the airport!

I was traveling to Boston to get to Cape Cod, to visit family with just Deacon, my youngest at the time. He was in between breastmilk and cows milk and so we supplemented with formula. He ate solid food but not enough to satisfy my big, growing boy. We went through security before I realized it. They do not sell formula anywhere in an airport, FYI. I learned that the hard way.

Thankfully, our flight was delayed for one hour. I had our bag checked, of course, and so we left the airport and went back to the car and into the parking garage. I drove to the closest Walmart and bought baby formula. This may have been one of the highest stress situations I have been in and I felt like I was the worst mom on the planet that day.

By then he wanted a bottle so I made one on the spot in the Walmart parking lot and drove back to the airport. We had to go through security again and made it back just in time. I definitely would have had to miss my flight otherwise! Lesson learned. Don’t be like me. Use this list.

I sometimes think about when I was younger and meticulously packed my purse or bag for a class in college. Now I can’t even remember what I even needed for myself. A hairbrush, mirror, face powder? Now I just need chapstick, phone, and a wallet and I’m good. It’s the little ones that need all of the things!

Oh yeah and after all that packing, don’t forget the little one too! 

This post originally appeared on Life Love & Little Boys.

Located in Bloomington, Indiana I am a wife, full-time working Mom to 3 boys, a part-time graduate student & a writer. I am also an optimist, problem solver, peacemaker, gardener, runner and a crazy-busy mom just trying to enjoy each moment. I truly value my friends, family and my mommy tribe.

As a parent, you probably spend 75 percent of your awake hours searching for things your kids have misplaced, which can be especially challenging when you’re on a mad dash to make it out the door for school in the morning. One dad’s viral hairbrush hack will ensure that your kids will never leave the house with unbrushed hair again.

Fed up with never being able to find a hairbrush, dad Mike Thiessen decided to take matters into his own hands and make sure the hairbrush never left the bathroom again. As Thiessen shared in a Facebook post that has since gone viral, the simple solution to lost items is to chain them up.

Thiessen attached a metal ring to the hole at the end of the hairbrush and then linked it to a long chain which he attached to the wall with an eye hook. The clever hack received tons of positive feedback with other parents wanting a similar set up at home.

And why stop there? Just think of the possibilities. You’ll never search desperately for that TV remote or the scissors again.

—Shahrzad Warkentin

Featured photo: Emma Simpson via Unsplash

 

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The due date has finally arrived for the new Hatchimals HatchiBabies and these adorable babies are sure to be one of the most coveted toys this holiday season. Read on for cuteness overload! ‘

HatchiBabies, the newest addition to come from the Hatchery Nursery in Hatchtopia, come in two different species, Ponette and Cheetree. When you hatch your new toy, you are also treated to the surprise of finding out whether you have a boy or a girl. When you’re ready to hatch your new baby, just give the egg a few taps or snuggles. The egg will start to rock and your baby will sing “Rockabye Baby” to let you know it is about to hatch.

One of the most exciting parts of these new HatchiBabies is the accessories that come inside each HatchiBabies egg. For the first time ever, these speckled eggs will come packed with hidden compartments that can be opened after the babies hatch. Inside the compartments you’ll find some fun surprises to help you care for your new baby, like a bottle,  hairbrush and rattle.

You’ll also find a mini highchair inside to give your baby a place to sit and be fed. And of course, no birth would be complete without your very own birth certificate.

These baby Hatchimals need of a lot of love and care. Just like a real baby, they need to be fed and burped, but they will also respond to plenty of snuggles and a good tickle. They can also be taught to play baby games, like “find my toes,” and learn their first words.

In addition to Ponette and Cheetree, there are three very special HatchiBabies species you can only get at select stores. You can find adorable Chipadee HatchiBabies at Amazon, cheeky Monkiwi HatchiBabies at Target or cuddly Koalabee HatchiBabies at Walmart.

Chipadee HatchiBaby (Amazon.com)

Chipadee comes with all of the regular HatchiBabies accessories, as well as a cute little acorn—and you can only get it at Amazon.

Monkiwi HatchiBaby (Target)

The cheeky little Monkiwi you can only find at Target wouldn’t be complete without a banana for meal time noms.

Koalabee HatchiBaby (Walmart)

Walmart’s exclusive Koalabee comes with its very charm bracelet that your kiddo can customize.

You can bring home all the new HatchiBabies now for $59.99 each, sold online and in stores.

—Shahrzad Warkentin

All photos: Courtesy Hatchimals/Spin Master

 

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Original article by Laura Gaskill on Houzz

When you have backpacks to find, lunches to pack and permission slips to sign, school mornings can feel like a big shift in gears from lazier summer schedules. And by the time everyone is home and ready for dinner, cooking may be the last thing you have the energy for. If you’re looking for ways to ease up on the weekday kitchen chaos, here are ideas and tips for making lighter work of morning breakfasts, packed lunches and weeknight dinners.

1. Carve out prep time on the weekend. An hour or two of weekend meal prep can go a long way toward making busy weeknight dinners feel more doable. Start by making a list of tried-and-true meals you know you can pull together quickly and that your family enjoys. Save this list (and add to it) as time goes on, and you’ll soon have your own cheat sheet of easy go-to dinners you can rely on when your calendar gets packed.

– If you have a little time: Plan easy favorites for dinner, go shopping and wash some produce when you get home.

– If you have more time: Chop vegetables, cut up fruit, cook grains and make one or more meals to freeze and reheat later in the week.

Timesaving tip: Organize your shopping list by the sections (cold case, produce, bakery) in your favorite grocery store. It’s more efficient and you’re less likely to forget something.

2. Gather lunch-making supplies in one convenient spot. There’s something incredibly disheartening about facing a tumbling tower of mismatched Tupperware before you’ve had your full morning allotment of caffeine. Make things easier (and maybe even entice young ones to help out) by gathering all the necessary lunch-making supplies in one spot. Here are some essentials you may want to include:

– Reusable water bottles

– Unbreakable food storage containers or bento-st‌yle boxes

– Small, spill-proof containers for sauces and dips

– Insulated thermos for hot foods

– Reusable plastic or metal flatware

– Reusable snack bags

– Paper or reusable napkins

– Masking tape and a permanent marker for writing names on everything

3. Make the kids’ dishes accessible. Encourage young helpers to set their own place at the table (or even grab their own breakfast) by positioning a set of tableware in a lower cabinet or drawer. This one simple change can empower kids to help themselves and takes one more task off your own plate.

Timesaving tip: Want to improve access without having to rearrange the entire kitchen? Just grab one plate, bowl and cup for each child in the house and stack them somewhere they can reach. Fill a mug with flatware, stack up a few napkins, and you’re set.

4. Plan ahead for weekday morning ease. You are probably already well aware of your family’s particular pain points in the morning — consider what these roadblocks look like and face them head on.

– If your family is always running late: Put a big clock in the kitchen and set it ahead by 10 minutes. Can’t people just look at their phones, you might ask? Sure, but with a giant clock on the wall, they’re more likely to use it to keep track.

– If your family tends to skip breakfast: Find one or two appealing options that can be prepared the night before and keep them stocked in the fridge. A blender filled with smoothie ingredients and yogurt parfaits in jars are favorites in my house.

5. Revamp the family command center. Think about what your family needs easy access to the most in the morning. Fielding last-second requests to print out school projects? Consider stationing a wireless printer in a lower cabinet. Always losing track of the hairbrush? Stash an extra in the drawer. What this is not the place for are random items and extras: so find another spot for the stray batteries, balls of rubber bands, appliance warranties and 10,000 extra pens (or is that just in my house?).

6. Clear a spot for homework and after-school projects. If your kids are likely to congregate in the kitchen while working on homework or art projects after school, embrace it and make space for it. Keep the kitchen table cleared and store a caddy of school supplies nearby so they have everything they need.

7. Stock a healthy snack station. Kids can be ravenous when they get home from a long day at school, so be sure to put the snacks you want them to reach for at an appealing child-height in the pantry or fridge. Some current favorites in our house include seaweed snacks, apple chips, cheese sticks, yogurt cups and fresh fruit.

Timesaving tip: Fill baggies with individual servings of snack time favorites on the weekend, when you’re feeling less frantic. Then on weekday afternoons, kids can just grab a bag on their own.

8. Keep a running grocery list where everyone can see it. Getting midway through a dinner recipe only to find you’re missing a key ingredient — or worse, waking up to find there’s no coffee in the house — is one of life’s greatest little annoyances. Avoid the problem (and, ahem, stop ponying up to the swear jar) by keeping track of items you need on a centrally located grocery list. A digital list can work well too, just be sure everyone in the household is synced up so you don’t miss a thing.

Featured Photo Courtesy: LiB contents, original photo on Houzz

Houzz is the leading platform for home remodeling and design. We provide our community of over 40 million monthly users with everything they need to improve their home from start to finish.

When my oldest son was a baby, I couldn’t wait for him to reach the next milestone, whatever it was: I wanted him to roll over, crawl, walk, talk, play nicely, pick up his toys, do long division. Now he’s ten, and those early milestones are but a faint memory (except for the long division thing, which is daily torture).

These days, I’m finding myself struggling not to fall back into that “let’s get big already” mode of thinking when I assess my current 3-year-old.

Because tweens are really great. They can make their own lunches, take snacks, ride their bikes outside without you standing there watching — even fold their laundry if you’re super lucky. You can reason with them. As in, when you’re at Target, they don’t shriek because you won’t let them out of the shopping cart. For that matter, they can actually walk nicely in Target.

They can shovel the walk after it snows. They can beat you at strategy games like Chess, or Risk; not just Candy Land and Uno. They can ask you questions about current events. Their reading level is high enough for them to choose books based on their own interests, and they might even know a thing or two about a subject that you are entirely unfamiliar with (like, say, aircraft carriers and destroyers).

It is not hard to imagine the day when I’ll be able to ask my son for real advice or assistance in his special area of expertise, and he’ll happily provide it.

Yet, I wish I had savored my son’s preschool years the same way I am enjoying his current tween phase. Ten is great, but he’ll never be 3 again, and that makes me feel a little… not sad, quite, but wistful, perhaps.

Because 3-year-olds have a lot to offer, too.

So, in an effort to slow myself down and focus on cherishing the fleeting moments I am blessed to presently share with a vivacious, spunky 3-year-old girl, I’ve compiled a list of eleven great things about three-year-olds:

1. They love to cuddle.

Just for fun. Just because it seems like a good idea at the moment. Even when they were all but spitting fire at you in a frenzied rage just a moment ago because you said “We can’t play outside when it’s zero degrees and there’s a blizzard.”

Maybe sometimes you don’t want to have a small person plop themselves onto your lap like they own the joint. Don’t worry. Before you know it, you’ll find yourself engaged in expert hostage-level negotiations just for the privilege of planting a good-night kiss on their sweet little pre-adolescent cheek!

2. They love to bask in your glow.

If cuddling isn’t an option, say, because you’re standing, they just want to keep you company. Wherever you are. Cooking, dressing, shopping, you name it. Sure, there are times when my twisty moves would impress a contortionist — necessary to avoid tripping and breaking my funny bone. Generally, though, it makes me feel all fuzzy inside when I look down from the sink where I’m washing dishes and find Princess hosting a tea party with her “babies” right between my feet.

When she starts preschool in the fall, I know I’ll miss my little sidekick.

3. They think you’re beautiful.

Even when you’re having a bad day — a sleep-deprived, makeup-free, unwashed-hair day. You can see it in their eyes as they ask you thought-provoking questions regarding the color of your crocs or ancient hoodie; as you watch them blow kisses to your framed wedding photo; or when they co-opt your hairbrush, and only yours.

Please don’t tell anyone, but sometimes, it’s a nice little ego boost.

4. They don’t get irony.

Same goes for sarcasm, snark and eyeball rolling. They don’t get it and they don’t intend it. Everything is just what it is. “Mommy, there’s crumbs sticking to the bottom of my feet. We need to clean up.” Not a touch of irony!

If only I could say the same for myself.

5. They go to bed really early.

Of course, you always knew that older kids would have later bedtimes. You just never quite consciously made the connection between their bedtime and your alone-time. If having the evening to yourself was something you’ve always relished, well, just know that those nights are numbered.

Enjoy them while they last.

And that, I say without the least bit of irony.

6. They forgive you.

Maybe you were unfairly impatient with them because of other things going on in your life (like fifth grade math homework). Maybe you said “No playing outside when there’s a blizzard.” Maybe you forgot to buy more milk. Or maybe you weren’t sufficiently understanding of their distress at having to go to bed.

Whatever your failing or mistake, they will completely, one-hundred-percent forgive you from the bottom of their little hearts; no questions, no grudges–

Even if you never actually apologized.

7. They’re willing to try a new food just because you’re eating it.

True, this means that you end up sharing or giving away a substantial portion of your lunch or mid-morning snack, whether it be plain yogurt with sliced vegetables and whole wheat toast or that bar of chocolate you’d secreted away. Still, the benefits, and potential to expand their young culinary palettes, cannot be overlooked.

Note to self: Wait for Dora before reaching for Godiva.

8. Cereal is the best supper ever.

I really think this is one of those things that you don’t appreciate until it’s gone, but seriously, 3-year-olds love cereal, or any breakfast food for that matter, such as waffles or pancakes, for supper. It’s easy, fills ’em up, and is fortified with vitamins. Can’t go wrong!

No way would this cut it for my 10-year-old. Ten-year-olds eat.

9. They love being read to, and will pantomime along.

Admit it: You’re secretly proud of being able to recite “Goodnight, Moon” by heart. Also all of the Eric Carle books. Oh, and can’t forget Olivia, and “If You Give a Mouse a Cookie,” and…. Once upon a time, I was able to quote Shakespeare and Dylan Thomas. Heck, I could even recite the Rule Against Perpetuities with my eyes closed.

Now it’s “Knuffle Bunny.” But “Knuffle Bunny” is so much better. You know why? Because when Trixie cries in the story, your little sidekick fake-cries along. And when Knuffle Bunny is happily found, thank goodness, your sidekick breaks out in smiles like it’s the first time she ever heard this amazing tale.

She brings life to the words. She’s there, she’s with you. It’s a two-part chorus, and hers in an awesome little voice to have for harmony.

Which brings me to item no. 10.

10. When they’re happy, they sing.

It never occurs to them that maybe they’re off-key, or that singing is “uncool.” They don’t know “cool”. They couldn’t care less about carrying a tune. Expressing emotions doesn’t make them feel vulnerable, it makes them feel empowered. They’ll even pause for a moment to charmingly inform you: “Mommy, I songing.”

They don’t realize any of this on a conscious level, of course. Three-year-olds keep it simple: When they’re happy, they sing.

11. Theirs is a world of infinite possibilities.

They are “outside the box” thinkers because, to them, there really is no box. When my son spoke animatedly about a “family dinner”, for example, his 3-year-old sister chimed in with her thoughts of a “flying dinner.” I never even considered a flying dinner, but it sure sounds fun, if a little motion sickness-inducing.

This is the creative spark unhampered by the boundaries of reason and logic. If this spark is nurtured, the 3-year-olds of today will grow to become tomorrow’s innovators, trailblazers and pioneers.

In the meantime, I am trying to re-discover the world’s astonishing complexity and beauty through my three-year-old’s big, brown eyes–together with her.

What else should be on this list? Add your comment below!

To read more, visit Huffington Post Parents by clicking here.

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