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My New Crock-Pot Rocks

A week and a half ago I went out and bought a slow cooker. (It was a Versaware by Crock-Pot for $39.99 at Kitchen Stuff Plus, to be exact.) I wondered at first whether this review would be a good fit for my blog since I don’t usually write on cooking. Is a slow cooker a parenting tool? But then I realized that an inordinate amount of my time and energy is spent thinking about, prepping for, and actually feeding my children. Anything that can help with that is definitely on topic.

I’m not entirely sure how I finally decided that I needed a slow cooker, but I suddenly could wait no longer.

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Morning Mayhem

DAILY SNACK

We had a bit of a moment this morning,

While I was trying to get us dressed and out to the library.

Irene was demanding to be held at all times,

And Colum was running around,

And hiding,

And refusing to even try to dress himself.

So I yelled

And wrestled a sweater on over his head.

And he cried hard.

We finally got it together and were on our way

When I stopped.

I paused on the sidewalk to give my son a hug.

I told him I was sorry for yelling and losing my temper.

“And I’m sorry, Mom, for crying,” he said,

“Sometimes kids and parents need to learn to calm down.”

My heart melted.

“Hey! Cal-m down and Colum rhyme!”

Well, kinda.

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Swarovski’s Stars For the Wishes Workshops

ornamentkit1Saturday, December 5 and Saturday, December 12 from 10am – noon at the Toronto Eaton Centre

Your kids can make Swarovski crystal ornaments and support The Children’s Wish Foundation of Canada. Swarovski is holding 30 minute workshops every Saturday morning until December 12 (which means there’s only two more mornings left) in which children create ornaments to take home for $20, every penny of which is going to the Children’s Wish Foundation.

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Habitat For Humanity Toronto Gingerbread Build

Saturday December 5th & Sunday December 6th at The Delta Chelsea Hotel (Located at 33 Gerrard Street West). 10am – 2:30pm

You can build a gingerbread house with your kid and donate to Habitat for Humanity, helping to build homes for families in need, at the same time.

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Etobicoke Lakeshore Christmas Parade

Saturday, December 5 from 10am

It’s your second chance at a Santa Parade. If you missed the big one, or if you’re just clamoring for more parade magic, consider checking out the Etobicoke Lakeshore Christmas Parade. (Colum asked if we were going to see the Santa parade again the very next weekend. He said, “But you said it happens every year.” We’re working on chronology.)

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The Shapes of My Love

DAILY SNACK

We sat on the floor,

She and I,

With a red circle and an orange pentagon

And a cylinder with holes for these two shapes

Among others that we didn’t need today.

She would pick up the red circle

And shake it to hear its rattle

And then swiftly push it through its proper hole.

Then she would try to do the same with the orange pentagon,

But it would never fit in the circle’s hole.

So I gently guided her to the right hole,

And helped maneuver it just so,

Until – plop! – it dropped in.

I then unscrewed the lid to retrieve our two shapes

And began again.

And again.

And again.

Moments like these are what life is all about.

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Dear Other Mom

DAILY SNACK

So when I tell you that I have one or two hours worth of work

That I do from home every day

While taking care of the kids,

And you ask how I do it,

And I tell you that I sometimes work at night,

And that I sometimes put Irene down for a nap

And turn on the TV for Colum,

And you say,

“Who am I to judge what other people have to do to get through the day,”

I hear judgment.

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Babies in Things: Always Cute

DAILY SNACK

Baby on board. Chug a chug a choo choo.
Baby on board. Chug a chug a choo choo.
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Jingle Hells Bells

DAILY SNACK

We were walking home yesterday evening,

And I asked Colum if he ever talks to his teachers at nursery school.

“Well, yesterday at circle time,

I told them I know a rock song called Hells Bells.”

“Oh really? And what did they say?”

“They sang the wrong words.”

Yes, I imagine they did.

How awesome is that?

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‘Tis the Season to Give a Crap

The holidays are here again, so brace yourself for the inevitable tug of war between charity and commercialism. The Christmas season should be about giving to others, we all know that, but we also want to give to our own family. This Christmas Colum is old enough to really look forward to the loot, to write a letter to Santa and to be wowed by the presents on Christmas morning. And I really want to wow him. So I think, sure I’ll give to others after I have taken care of my own family. I think, I support giving and charity, I do, and it’s really great that other people are so into that kind of thing. They must have more money and time and fewer responsibilities than I do.

But then I think of my mother and my mother-in-law. These are two women who have raised four children each and worked full-time jobs and balanced budgets and somehow managed to put food on the table and shoes on our feet no matter how scarce money was. They also managed to be everywhere at once: the skating rink and ballet classes and school plays and baseball games. From the PTA and Boy Scouts (Donna) to nursing relatives on their death beds and sitting on the floor of a Greyhound bus while eight months pregnant (Mom), there is nothing these women wouldn’t do. Their entire lives have been guided by a sense of giving and self-sacrifice. They volunteer their time and energy and money as a matter of course, never stopping to wonder if they have enough to spare. Whenever and wherever a need arises, these women automatically ask themselves, “How can I help?” (Not “Should I help?” or “I wish I could help.”) And then, swiftly and quietly, they do.

So when I started seeing initiatives that encourage bloggers to use their corporate and social networking connections to pay their good fortune forward I thought, good. I mean, after the recent scourge of name calling and finger pointing that has been dominating mommy-blogging circles in the lead up to and the wake of the new FTC regulations (the assumption that we are all corporate whores, essentially, willing to give it up for free crap), this is a breath of fresh air. Initiatives like Her Bad Mother’s Give Good Blog or Mamanista’s Bloganthropy encourage bloggers to champion a cause and to exploit any corporate contacts in doing so.

Yeah, bloggers should totally do that, I thought. I would too if only I were more widely read and had more companies knocking at my door. But wait. I did use my blog to host an online raffle for breast cancer research at the Princess Margaret Hospital. And I did reach out to family-oriented businesses, many run by moms who are friendly with the blogging community for awesome donations. And they did come through. I actually used my blog to raise over $2000 in personal donations to the Weekend To End Breast Cancer. When my good friend Gillian lost her baby, I blogged about that and made up a button that links to the Sick Kids Foundation’s donation page and stuck it at the bottom of that post and in my sidebar. Huh.

Maybe I can do something after all. So then I emailed Kathryn Easter from Mom Central Canada and said, Hey. You know that giveaway we’re doing for Disney on Ice? What are the chances we can get another set of tickets to give to a family that is spending the holidays at Interval House, a safe haven for abused women and children? And Kathryn said, Let’s do it up. (I’m totally paraphrasing, you know.) And so we are.

I tell you all this not to toot my own horn. (Although I guess that is the biggest effect, isn’t it?) Mostly I tell you all this because if I can actually do some good with this blog and its regular readership of my family and friends and the hundreds of porn-bot followers I have on Twitter, then imagine what you can do. You don’t need a hugely successful blog to make a difference. You don’t even need a blog at all.

My mother and mother-in-law didn’t have blogs, after all. Hell, they didn’t even have Facebook. (I know!) And they still managed to find a way to do good things for people in need. So if we all just try to be a little more like them, then we don’t even need a formal declaration. We just need to act.

On that note, let the holiday season begin.

(Image courtesy of saxon on Flickr.)