Untaming

Untaming REWILD THE CHILD

Prioritizing our biological norms over our social norms.
(3)

27/07/2023
20/06/2023

Ohhhh I love this video so much (except for those hands in the last clip). My sister showed it to me when I was pregnant with my first child and I hadn't been able to find it online again and it just now popped up on me feed, so I had to share!

29/05/2023

A man came home from work and found his three children outside, still in their pajamas, playing in the mud, with empty food boxes and wrappers strewn all around the front yard. The door of

his wife’s car was open, as was the front door to the house and there was no sign of the dog.

Proceeding into the entry, he found an even bigger mess. A lamp had been knocked over, and the throw rug was wadded against one wall. In the front room the TV was loudly blaring a cartoon channel, and the family room was strewn with toys and various items of clothing. In the kitchen, dishes filled the sink, breakfast food was spilled on the counter, the fridge door was open wide, dog food was spilled on the floor, a broken glass lay under the table, and a small pile of sand was spread by the back door.

He quickly headed up the stairs, stepping over toys and more piles of clothes, looking for his wife. He was worried she might be ill, or that something serious had happened. He was met with a small trickle of water as it made its way out the bathroom door. As he peered inside he found wet towels, scummy soap and more toys strewn over the floor. Miles of toilet paper lay in a heap and toothpaste had been smeared over the mirror and walls.

As he rushed to the bedroom, he found his wife still curled up in the bed in her pajamas, reading a novel. She looked up at him, smiled, and asked how his day went. He looked at her bewildered and asked, ‘What happened here today?’

She again smiled and answered, “You know every day when you come home from work and you ask me what in the world I do all day?”

“Yes,” was his incredulous reply.

She answered, “Well, today I didn’t do it."

Sisterhood connecting together as one.

06/05/2023

Without a doubt, the top question I get asked by parents of toddlers, preschoolers and children in the early school years is:

"How can I get them to sleep alone?"

This question means different things to different parents, e.g::

* how can I get them to go to sleep at bedtime, without sitting next to them the whole time?
* how can I get them to sleep in their own bed all night?
* how can I get them to stay in their own room and not keep coming out?

Whatever the meaning though - the underlying concept is the same. Why don't young children happily sleep independently?

To answer this question we have to understand that children are no different to the young of any other mammal - and virtually ALL mammals sleep next to their young until they are almost fully grown. For animals this is important, because it keeps their offspring safe from predators. For human offspring, they may not be eaten by predators in the night, but this doesn't stop them from feeling vulnerable and scared of being alone. Similarly, the close proximity to their parents at night helps them to feel safe and secure - and for good sleep, children need to NOT be in fight or flight mode, full of anxiety and cortisol.

What's the solution? Most importantly, I think we need a harsh reality check (sorry!). As much as society tells us that we shouldn't mollycoddle children and that it's weird and somehow wrong for them to need cuddling to sleep, or contact with us all night, we have to cut through the noise and go back to animalistic basics. It's hard for children to sleep independently because every cell in their being is screaming that it is wrong.

This is tough for us, it is exhausting, it is draining, it is frustrating...but if we reset our expectations and hold a realistic viewpoint it is SO Much easier - because we stop fighting our children and nature too.

(more later on today for a few little pointers that can gently (and at the child's pace) help to encourage the emergence of some sleep independence, because sometimes you just can't meet their needs for attachment at night!).

For more on the realities, psychology and physiology of infant and child sleep (and how to gently improve it) you can grab a copy of the new edition of my 'The Gentle Sleep Book' for only 99p for the rest of this week. Note: DON'T BUY THE PAPERBACK FROM AMAZON, they will send you the old, outdated edition which is significantly less helpful! The ebook is the new version though (and much cheaper!):
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Gentle-Sleep-Book-toddlers-pre-schoolers-ebook/dp/B00SRXR47Y/ref=tmm_kin_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=&sr=

Alternatively you can get the updated paperback here:

https://uk.bookshop.org/shop/sarahockwellsmithauthor

26/04/2023

He's off to work
Bearing the weight of the bills
Her indoors
With twelve hours to fill
And up six times in the night, still
Each thinking that the other
Has struck the better deal

Casting up
And putting down
Petty remarks and resentments abound
So much more
To disagree about now

Negotiating lie-ins
That were once spent together
Taking turns
When one is under the weather

Tag-teaming
Ships in the night
That never-ending
Relay race

Passing the baton
For another hour
Right, it's your turn
I'm off for a shower ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀

But when all's said and done
If I could choose anyone to
Navigate through
This parenthood
It would always
Be you

Eavesdropping and smiling
At the little chats you have
Remembering that actually
You're a bloody good dad

But oh remember
That bloated adolescence of ours?
Carefree and easy
Doing nothing for hours

And of course, I wouldn't change it
It's better now we've him

I guess what I'm saying is
I miss you
A bit

Words: Karen McMillan (Mother Truths)
Image: O Trocatintas

Words taken from my poetry book: "Mother Truths: Poems on Early Motherhood" Available to buy worldwide: https://linktr.ee/mother_truths

Oh, this is SO important! And needs to happen much more often. We need to teach our children that it's ok to say no to a...
10/04/2023

Oh, this is SO important! And needs to happen much more often. We need to teach our children that it's ok to say no to adults. That it's ok to voice their discomfort. How important it is to acknowledge that unwanted play from another person is not acceptable just to maintain the status quo.

🤍Be a cycle breaker🤍

A grown man looms behind my three-year-old daughter. Occasionally he will poke or tickle her and she responds by shrinking. Smaller and smaller with each unwanted advance. I imagine her trying to become slight enough to slip out of her booster seat and slide under the table.

When my mother views this scene, she sees playful taunting. A grandfather engaging with his granddaughter.

“Mae.” My tone cuts through the din of a familiar family gathering together. She does not look at me.

“Mae.” I start again. “You can tell him no Mae. If this isn’t okay you could say something like, Papa, please back up—I would like some space for my body.”

As I say the words, my step-father, the bulldog, leans in a little closer, hovering just above her head. His tenebrous grin taunts me as my daughter accordions her 30-pound frame hoping to escape his tickles and hot breath.

I repeat myself with a little more force. She finally peeks up at me.

“Mama . . . can you say it?”

Surprise. A three-year-old-girl doesn’t feel comfortable defending herself against a grown man. A man that has stated he loves and cares for her over and over again, and yet, stands here showing zero concern for her wishes about her own body. I ready myself for battle.

“Papa! Please back up! Mae would like some space for her body.”

My voice is firm but cheerful. He does not move.

“Papa. I should not have to ask you twice. Please back up. Mae is uncomfortable.”

“Oh, relax,” he says, ruffling her wispy blonde hair.
The patriarchy stands, patronizing me in my own damn kitchen. “We’re just playin’.” His southern drawl does not charm me.

“No. You were playing. She was not. She’s made it clear that she would like some space, now please back up.”

“I can play how I want with her.” He says, straightening his posture.

My chest tightens. The sun-bleached hairs on my arms stand at attention as this man, who has been my father figure for more than three decades, enters the battle ring.

“No. No, you cannot play however you want with her. It’s not okay to ‘have fun’ with someone who does not want to play.”

He opens his mouth to respond but my rage is palpable through my measured response. I wonder if my daughter can feel it. I hope she can.

He retreats to the living room and my daughter stares up at me. Her eyes, a starburst of blue and hazel, shine with admiration for her mama. The dragon has been slayed (for now). My own mother is silent. She refuses to make eye contact with me.

This is the same woman who shut me down when I told her about a sexual assault I had recently come to acknowledge.

This is the same woman who was abducted by a carful of strangers as she walked home one night. She fought and screamed until they kicked her out. Speeding away, they ran over her ankle and left her with a lifetime of physical and emotional pain.

This is the same woman who said nothing, who could say nothing as her boss and his friends sexually harassed her for years.

This is the same woman who married one of those friends.

When my mother views this scene, she sees her daughter overreacting. She sees me ‘making a big deal out of nothing.’ Her concerns lie more in maintaining the status quo and cradling my step-dad’s toxic ego than in protecting the shrinking three-year-old in front of her.

When I view this scene, I am both bolstered and dismayed. My own strength and refusal to keep quiet is the result of hundreds, probably thousands of years of women being mistreated, and their protests ignored. It is the result of watching my own mother suffer quietly at the hands of too many men. It is the result of my own mistreatment and my solemn vow to be part of ending this cycle.

It would be so easy to see a little girl being taught that her wishes don’t matter. That her body is not her own. That even people she loves will mistreat and ignore her. And that all of this is “okay” in the name of other people, men, having fun.

But. What I see instead is a little girl watching her mama. I see a little girl learning that her voice matters. That her wishes matter. I see a little girl learning that she is allowed and expected to say no. I see her learning that this is not okay.

I hope my mom is learning something, too.

Fighting the patriarchy one grandpa at a time.

~ By Lisa Norgren

Photo: TheGuardian

25/03/2023

Do you know that feeling when you wake up in the middle of the night and it’s cold and your diaper feels heavy. And there are so many strange sounds all around you, and it’s dark and scary. And you get a hit in your head and it’s your hand that’s on its own adventure. And you can’t control it at all and it flings itself around and scratches your face and pulls at your hair. And your legs start kicking off the duvet, even though you’re cold as it is and you try to make it stop but they have their own will. And so you’re lying there completely helpless with flailing limbs that want to do everything, but none of the things you want.

And you can’t find mom. And you call for her and you find yourself feeling really scared. What if your beloved mom doesn’t come for you. You can’t imagine anything worse and you start to cry because you miss her so terribly. You have never felt as alone as this very moment.

And then she is suddenly there. Standing right by your bed and looking at you with worry and love. And she is the most beautiful thing you’ve ever seen. And you grin up at her with happiness and relief. You don’t think you’ve ever felt as happy as this very moment.

And she picks you up and holds you close. And she smells like herself, and also a bit like you. Like milk and safety and love. And it’s the best smell in the whole entire world.

And she is warm and safe and soft and her hands caress you and she feeds you and hums your favourite tune. And you love her voice. You’ve known it far longer than you’ve really known her. It has lulled you to sleep and made you laugh and calmed you when you were distressed. It is the most beautiful voice in the whole entire world.

And you get to lie right up against her and you feel your entire body start to warm up again. And your still cold hand starts stroking her and moves up towards her neck and accidentally scratches her. Stupid uncontrollable hand. But mom doesn’t get angry. She takes your stupid hand in hers and it turns all warm again. And this is the best feeling in the world. Right here in mommy’s arms, with your hand in hers. Even the diaper doesn’t feel as horrible anymore.

And you feel your eyes getting heavy and you know that everything is okay now cause mommy is here. Your mom. Your wonderful, incredible mom who always looks after you. Night and day.

You look up at her one last time before you fall asleep. She looks tired and her eyes are closed, and yet she is still the most magnificent thing you know. How amazing that she wants to sit here with you in this moment. How amazing that she will always sit with you for a bit when you need her to.

You smile to yourself. How lucky you were that she became your mom. The most perfect mom anyone could have asked for.
You knew, even before you saw her, that she would be the best thing in the world.

Oh how you love her. Your mom.❤️
Words by: The Mommy Poet

09/03/2023


The reason why mothers struggle in our current culture is the lack of respect and importance that is given to their role and to their work.

If the unpaid work of mothers was included on the GDP, then things would be very, very different.

The 44 million litres of breast milk produced by mothers every year in Australia would have a market value of $3 billion dollars.

If we included the unpaid labour of domestic work and caring for others, including children, it would add more than 560 billion dollars to the Australia economy, of which women are responsible for nearly two thirds.

According to the ABS this would add an extra 33-47% to the GDP.

The annual HILDA studies show women compared to men
do 21 more hours per week on average of unpaid domestic and carer work. That equates to about 350 Billion dollars per year.

Women’s unpaid domestic and care work would contribute more than $12 trillion to the annual global GDP.

This financial invisibility directly contributes to the all the aspects of motherhood that are challenging and harmful:

*perinatal mood disorders
*overwhelm and isolation
*marital discontent and divorce
*family issues of which we can only guess

The patriarchal system which is so ignorantly toxic to mothers then perpetuates this invisibility.

21/01/2023
10/01/2023

About 15 years ago, I stopped treating fevers by trying to lower them with OTC meds.

I've never attempted to lower a fever in my children, and I don't do it in myself, either.

Instead, we focus on rest, staying at a comfortable temperature (this usually means wrapping up for awhile to allow the fever to do its job and fight off chills -- those are your body trying to maintain the fever and are avoidable!), taking hot herbal detox baths with Epsom salts, and sipping water.

We don't get fevers that often, but when we do, they break in ~24 hours. We rarely ever have them last longer than that, and we recover from illness fairly quickly.

Most fevers are not to be feared. Don't fight the immune system -- support it!

Ohhhhh this is fantastic!! Such an excellent table demonstrating the dysfunctionality of education in a traditional scho...
02/01/2023

Ohhhhh this is fantastic!! Such an excellent table demonstrating the dysfunctionality of education in a traditional school environment.

A Comparison of Traditional and Natural Learning

This chart appeared years ago on Family Learning Online and was written by Kathleen McCurdy. It doesn't seem to be online anywhere anymore other than the Wayback Machine and seemed too good to be lost in the void.

27/12/2022

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