Author Archive

Winter is Coming – Let’s Prepare!

Saturday, November 1st, 2008

In a few weeks, winter is coming. And from last year experience, winter is getting colder and colder, compared to the ones in the past. Thus, we need to prepare more carefully so that the whole family can enjoy the winter. Now, for personal use, besides the usual winter clothing, there is now some new great stuff that we can look into, from heated clothing, heated gloves, electric blanket, to foot warmers. And for the overall family, don’t forget to check whether the heater is still in good condition or need some upgrading.

Losing Weight While Detoxifying

Monday, October 27th, 2008

The best way to lose weight is also by doing some detoxifying, since a detox can result in losing weight further. And that is how orovo detox works. A detox is meant to cleanse the body of impurities and blockages that may be keeping you fat or even making you feel sick or sluggish. While we are losing weight, we can also get much healthier and fresh inside and outside.

Choosing Toys for All Ages

Monday, October 20th, 2008

So many toys get cast aside only minutes after being unwrapped. You’ve heard your friends and relatives tell you how children are always more interested in the wrapping than the actual gift. To an extent this is true, mainly because toys are often too complicated for your child or they require assistance to learn how to play with them.

When your child is very young, under 6 months old, everything is brand new to her. The most important part of selecting the right toy at this age is the interaction you as a parent have with your baby and the new toy. Rattles and stuffed animals are most interesting to your baby when you create a game out of them. They do not yet have the motor skills to do much with the toy, so you have to do it for them.

Be sure to buy age appropriate toys. This is very important as your baby develops because every toy is designed to help develop a certain skill. Most manufacturers now place an age guide on their products to ensure that they are being bought for the right age. For children under 3 years old always be especially careful when selecting a toy to ensure that it doesn’t have any small parts that could be considered a choking hazard.

You may notice your child becoming interested in certain activities such as pushing, pulling or sorting items. When you notice your baby focusing on a certain activity, you may want to pull out or purchase a toy that helps develop that skill.

Once your child does have the motor skills necessary to play with toys, don’t let the toy get cast aside until you have shown your baby all the features on it. This interaction is great for bonding with your child and for your child to learn new things. You may have a very fun toy, but if your baby doesn’t know how to turn on the sounds or what to do with it, she would much rather play with the box it came in.

On the other hand, don’t discount the box because you think it is a bad toy and that you think your child should be playing with the toy itself. In fact, a box can provide your youngster with hours of entertainment and help develop many different skills. Your baby will probably enjoy pushing or pulling the box around, playing peek-a-boo with the box or if she is old enough and the box big enough, climbing in and out of the box will due.

Be sure you rotate your toy inventory every few weeks. Store toys that your baby no longer seems interested in. Every few weeks, rotate some older toys back into her toy box and you will see your child have a renewed interest in a toy the previously stopped playing with. Repurposing toys as your child gets older is a great way to recycle old toys as well.

By following these few simple tips, you are sure to enjoy playtime with your baby. The toys you choose will not only be fun, but will encourage proper development in your baby as well.

Creating Storage under the Kids’ Beds

Monday, October 20th, 2008

The bigger the kids, the more storage you would need to put all of their things. What I find interesting is when we don’t have enough space to create more storage but want to have it anyway, we can actually create storage under the kids’ beds. I’m not saying that we need to buy new beds; there are actually metal bed frames risers that can get the beds higher and then put some storage right under the beds. You can just count of how many more things can be stored to make the rooms tidier just by using those bed frames. Sounds like a very creative way, right?

Having Our Own Business

Monday, October 20th, 2008

Women these days prefer to have their own business instead of working as employees to some companies. These being business owners have the benefit of unlimited income potential as well the flexibility of working time. With this flexibility of time, we can manage our business while also not loosing the chance to manage the family and kids and monitor them on daily basis.

Now, if you don’t know what business you are interested in, there are online services that provide listing of small business for sale. The good thing about this small business for sale is that we can learn the business profile as well as the performance before we choose to buy it. That will certainly reduce the risk of surprises as well as ups and downs.

Teaching a Child to Walk

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008

Exercise is essentially important to the health of the infant. Its first exercise, of course, will be in the nurse’s arms. After a month or two, when it begins to sleep less during the day, it will delight to roll and kick about on the sofa: it will thus use its limbs freely; and this, with carrying out into the open air, is all the exercise it requires at this period. By and by, however, the child will make its first attempts to walk. Now it is important that none of the many plans which have been devised to teach a child to walk, should be adopted the go-cart, leading-strings, etc.; their tendency is mischievous; and flatness of the chest, confined lungs, distorted spine, and deformed legs, are so many evils which often originate in such practices. This is explained by the fact of the bones in infancy being comparatively soft and pliable, and if prematurely subjected by these contrivances to carry the weight of the body, they yield just like an elastic stick bending under a weight, and as a natural consequence become curved and distorted.

It is highly necessary that the young and experienced mother should recollect this fact, for the early efforts of the little one to walk are naturally viewed by her with so much delight, that she will be apt to encourage and prolong its attempts, without any thought of the mischief which they may occasion; thus many a parent has had to mourn over the deformity which she has herself created.

It may be as well here to remark, that if such distortion is timely noticed, it is capable of correction, even after evident curvature has taken place. It is to be remedied by using those means that shall invigorate the frame, and promote the child’s general health (a daily plunge into the cold bath, or sponging with cold salt water, will be found signally efficacious), and by avoiding the original cause of the distortion never allowing the child to get upon his feet. The only way to accomplish the latter intention, is to put both the legs into a large stocking; this will effectually answer this purpose, while, at the same time, it does not prevent the free and full exercise of the muscles of the legs. After some months pursuing this plan, the limbs will be found no longer deformed, the bones to have acquired firmness and the muscles strength; and the child may be permitted to get upon his feet again without any hazard of perpetuating or renewing the evil.

The best mode of teaching a child to walk, is to let it teach itself, and this it will do readily enough. It will first crawl about: this exercises every muscle in the body, does not fatigue the child, throws no weight upon the bones, but imparts vigour and strength, and is thus highly useful. After a while, having the power, it will wish to do more: it will endeavour to lift itself upon its feet by the aid of a chair, and though it fail again and again in its attempts, it will still persevere until it accomplish it. By this it learns, first, to raise itself from the floor; and secondly, to stand, but not without keeping hold of the object on which it has seized. Next it will balance itself without holding, and will proudly and laughingly show that it can stand alone. Fearful, however, as yet of moving its limbs without support, it will seize a chair or anything else near it, when it will dare to advance as far as the limits of its support will permit. This little adventure will be repeated day after day with increased exultation; when, after numerous trials, he will feel confident of his power to balance himself, and he will run alone. Now time is required for this gradual self-teaching, during which the muscles and bones become strengthened; and when at last called upon to sustain the weight of the body, are fully capable of doing so.