How to be Productive during Football Season

It is that time of year again. That magical time that lets us know colder weather is around the corner and allows us to be best friends with total strangers, for a few hours at least. I am of course talking about that glorious season known as football season! (Insert Hank Williams, Jr. singing about being ready for some football here to help get you pumped up!)

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I will admit that on game days for my team, I can be kind of useless. I have been known to encourage cereal for dinner on game nights and once was relegated to writing a 10-page paper for a class in college during the Super Bowl half-time show (sorry, Teach). Luckily for you, you can learn from my mistakes and use these tips for how to be productive during football season and game nights especially.

Learn from my mistakes and use these tips to be productive during football season, game nights especially.

Make Commercials Work for You

Before the game starts, set a series of small goals and tasks to accomplish. During commercials, race against the clock to complete these tasks. Make sure your goals are super specific:

If you are watching the game somewhere other than home, you can still be productive. Pick tasks that you can do anywhere:

**Tip: Don’t worry about working these into your budget yet. Just notate them on the months they are coming up. This gives you a jump start on your next budget session.

Learn from my mistakes and use these tips to be productive during football season, game nights especially.

Plan for Meals Early

If the game falls right around meal time, you don’t want to be stuck in the kitchen for it. Luckily there are so many options available, you don’t have to be.

  1. Set the crockpot. Crockpot meals make it super easy to have dinner ready with minimal prep and time.
  2. Have a living room picnic. Throw together something quick and easy, like these toasted ranch chicken sandwiches or these taco roll-ups. Then put a blanket down on the floor and eat with your family there. Kids will start to love football days if this becomes a tradition!
  3. Have meals earlier. If it’s a late game, plan to eat dinner at 5pm instead of 6:00 or 7:00. If your family starts getting hungry during the game, whip up some popcorn for them to snack on during half-time.

Learn from my mistakes and use these tips to be productive during football season, game nights especially.

Don’t Forget about Bedtime Routines

Again, if you are looking forward to a late game, don’t forget about your kids’ bedtime routines. Get baths done and jammers on before the game starts. This is also great opportunity to start some family traditions. Buy some special game night jammers for everyone in the family (or make your own). The best part about these is that each person can get them in the team they love!

Trust me, these tips will help make football season more enjoyable for everyone in your family. (Even those crazy pants who don’t “understand the draw of it”.)  Cheers to a productive season!

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4 Tips You Need to Encourage Daddy-Baby Bonding

Pregnancy sucked.  Things happened to my body that I wouldn’t wish on my worst enemy.  I will admit that I was guilty of spending pretty much 9 months wishing that baby would just get out of my incubator already.

Once my first child was born, though, something immediately snapped inside of me.  It was as though when he came out, he took a piece of me with him.  In that moment, I knew that any harm or heartbreak that came to this tiny person would bring the same to me.  I was instantly head over heels in love in a way that I had never known possible.

 

These four important tips will help to encourage bonding between new daddys and baby.

Then the nurses went to hand him to my husband who suddenly went rigid the instant our son was in his arms.  His look wasn’t a mirror of the tears and adoration that I felt.  It was a look of abject terror.  I was hurt and confused by my husband’s reaction, wondering how that awe and patience didn’t automatically expand his heart like in that Grinch animation.

The answer is simple, of course.  He did not (and could not) experience the intimate relationship with this beautiful baby the way that pregnancy had afforded me.  I had already felt those kicks (or in my case, contortions) and I had the privilege of experiencing those first hiccups in utero.  This is why actively encouraging daddy-baby bonding is so important once your child is born and these tips will help you get started.

These four important tips will help to encourage bonding between new daddys and baby.

Let Him Take the Reins Sometimes

This can be incredibly difficult for a new mom for a myriad of reasons.  It is biologically difficult for her to be away from the baby.  Often, moms get more (if not the only) work leave in the family and they feel guilty about “passing off” the baby to papa after work.  Also, if you are breastfeeding you feel additional obligation to constantly be your baby’s caregiver.  Here are some tips to combat these barriers:

These four important tips will help to encourage bonding between new daddys and baby.

Extend That Newfound Baby-Patience to Dad

You will not always see eye-to-eye on how to parent and care for your child.  That’s not only okay, it’s good!  Let him make some of those decisions even when it’s hard to let go.  Be patient with him even if the idea ends up not working out.  How can he expect to feel that bond that you do if he doesn’t feel like he is getting any say in what’s best?

These four important tips will help to encourage bonding between new daddys and baby.

Once a Week, Do Something Nice for Him

Has your husband ever gotten a new tool or video game and then spent every free minute he has talking about it or playing with it?  Chances are you weren’t too happy about it.  Now, while obviously there is a big difference between a game and a baby, the fact remains that those hurt feelings and resentment are similar.  It may even be compounded further for him because he may feel guilty for resenting the attention you give the baby.  Making an effort to do things that show he is still number one can go a long way to help him.

These four important tips will help to encourage bonding between new daddys and baby.

Let Them Play

This is especially important if dad is nervous around such a tiny, fragile person.  Show him games he can play with the baby.  Here are some ideas if you need help:

Doing these things will help encourage and grow daddy-baby bonding but they will also help bring your new little family even closer.  There is nothing hotter in this world than a caring and devoted father.  You may find yourself falling in love all over again.

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Extending Grace in Motherhood

Too often we find ourselves judging other mothers and being judged by other mothers.  Frankly, if you don’t believe that you are judging other parents I’m here to tell you that you are.  We all do it, whether intentionally or not.  Even I have been known to cast judgement on other mothers in my mind, although I would never say something to the parent out loud.  Realizing this is the first step, but below are four important reasons for extending grace in motherhood. 

 

We are all guilty of passing judgement on other mothers but here are four reasons for extending grace in motherhood both for you and other mothers.

 

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I am not an assertive person at all.  This is something that I am working very hard at improving.  I also cannot help but hold myself to impossible standards of perfection.  In light of those facts, let me give you a little snippet of my current life:

All of this pretty much adds up to the fact that I am crazy busy and alone a great deal of the time.  As if all of that weren’t enough, we have recently discovered some mice in our house (one of the unfortunate hazards of being so near woods).

 

While over at our house, someone saw one.  They asked if we have traps to which I replied that we do.  I figured that would be the end of it.  Boy was I wrong.  A few days later, they brought mouse traps over to set (right that second, apparently).  They then say to me, “You can’t leave dirty dishes out overnight because that is essentially a feast to them.”

I was shocked and incredibly hurt, to say the least.  Not only did I feel that they were absolutely over-stepping, it also made me feel worse about what feels like the perpetual mess that is our home.  No matter how many I pick up, toys constantly litter our living room.  Dishes seem to multiply in the sink no matter how many times I load the dishwasher.  And frankly, I am just excited when there are two clean socks for the kids, let alone matching ones.  I took this comment as a personal attack on my ability to provide a home.

This ate at me for days, partly because I didn’t stand up to it and partly because I began to question whether I was doing a good job or not.  No more.  Motherhood is tough enough and many of us are already giving ourselves enough of a guilt trip without someone else adding fuel to the fire.  I am going to make a conscious effort to extend grace to myself and others. Here are four reasons why you should too:

 

We are all guilty of passing judgement on other mothers but here are four reasons for extending grace in motherhood both for you and other mothers.

You Cannot Do It All

Too often we try to be superwoman.  It is a valiant goal but to no avail.  We can’t do it all.  Prioritize what is most important to you and your family and focus on that.  If having family meals together and not eating out is important to you then focus your efforts on meal planning.  Don’t worry about the fact that the coffee table is littered with mail and coloring books.

 

We are all guilty of passing judgement on other mothers but here are four reasons for extending grace in motherhood both for you and other mothers.

Opinions Are Okay: Put-Downs Are Not

If someone wants to offer their constructive criticism or opinion, that’s fine.  Everyone is entitled to them and at the end of the day it is up to you to decide what is right for your family and follow it.  However, any “opinion” that directly or passively-aggressively attacks you, your family, or beliefs is unacceptable.  It needs to be firmly but lovingly addressed immediately.

 

We are all guilty of passing judgement on other mothers but here are four reasons for extending grace in motherhood both for you and other mothers.

Kids Won’t Remember If Dishes Were Done

There were times in my childhood when we were dirt poor and it literally came down to my mother deciding whether or not to pay the electric bill or feed our family.  And you know what?  Growing up I had no idea.  All I knew was that I had a mom who loved me and a warm bed to sleep in.  So believe me when I promise you that as long as there is food in their bellies and love in abundance, your kids do not care if you got the dishwasher loaded last night.  They remember the games you played, the stories you read, and the fun they had.

 

We are all guilty of passing judgement on other mothers but here are four reasons for extending grace in motherhood both for you and other mothers.

You Are Enough

I feel like moms can never hear this too many times: You are enough.  You are the one with the intimate knowledge of how your family works and what they need.  You are exactly what your kids need and you are doing a fantastic job.  It doesn’t matter if you are the car-pooling-cookie-baking-Pinterest mom or if you are the work-9-to-5-and-still-manage-dinner-and-story-time mom.  You are doing what works best for your family.

We all need these reminders sometimes and I hope they help you extend grace in motherhood too.

 

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