Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Some of My Old Poems

I stumbled upon this blog today from my info page on facebook. I forgot I had even created this (I remember writing the poems, of course, but forgot I had put them in a blog). Interesting thing to run across and read through. It's been years since I wrote any of these, but just thought I'd share:

http://jjamiesopoetry.blogspot.com/

Monday, September 26, 2011

What are we singing?!?!

I put a DVD in the DVD player today that someone gave my son when he was born. It's part of a great series of DVDs which focuses on using music combined with visual stimulation to engage and teach children from birth on. Great! 

Well, as I was singing along and dancing around in front of my son, I started to listen to the words. Although I've known the origins of some of these songs in the past and found it odd, I never thought too much about them, but for some reason it bothered me more today. 

Read these words to some of the most popular nursery rhymes we sing to our children today:

"Ring around the rosy,
A pocket full of posies,
Ashes, Ashes,
We all fall down!"

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"Rock a bye baby on the tree top,
When the wind blows the cradle will rock,
When the bough breaks the cradle will fall,
And down will come baby, cradle and all."

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"London Bridge is falling down,
Falling down, falling down,
London Bridge is falling down,
My fair lady.

Build it up with wood and clay,
Wood and clay, wood and clay,
Build it up with wood and clay,
My fair lady.

Wood and clay will wash away,
Wash away, wash away,
Wood and clay will wash away,
My fair lady.

Build it up with bricks and mortar,
Bricks and mortar, bricks and mortar,
Build it up with bricks and mortar,
My fair lady.

Bricks and mortar will not stay,
Will not stay, will not stay,
Bricks and mortar will not stay,
My fair lady.

Build it up with iron and steel,
Iron and steel, iron and steel,
Build it up with iron and steel,
My fair lady.

Iron and steel will bend and bow,
Bend and bow, bend and bow,
Iron and steel will bend and bow,
My fair lady.

Build it up with silver and gold,
Silver and gold, silver and gold,
Build it up with silver and gold,
My fair lady.

Silver and gold will be stolen away,
Stolen away, stolen away,
Silver and gold will be stolen away,
My fair lady.

Set a man to watch all night,
Watch all night, watch all night,
Set a man to watch all night,
My fair lady.

Suppose the man should fall asleep,
Fall asleep, fall asleep,
Suppose the man should fall asleep?
My fair lady.

Give him a pipe to smoke all night,
Smoke all night, smoke all night,
Give him a pipe to smoke all night,
My fair lady."

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Ring Around the Rosy - I have sung and danced to this upbeat nursery rhyme more times that I can count in my life. I can't even remember when I learned it. Maybe you've heard that this song supposedly refers to the Bubonic Plague (Black Death) that killed around 75 million people (30-60% of the entire population) in Europe during the 14th century[1]. I had heard this before too, but today it really hit me that those aren't just numbers, but rather, people! 75 million PEOPLE died a terrible death due to an outbreak of a disease, and we have a sing-song nursery rhyme which ends in us "all fall(ing) down," as if to die like the millions of people in Europe who died during this outbreak. YIKES! 
Ring around the rosy is said to be referring to the red sores, which looked as if they had a ring around them, that people who contracted this disease would get on their bodies. A pocket full of posies refers to sweet-smelling packets to either ward off the smell from the disease or to keep the disease from spreading (based on the incorrect idea that the disease was spread through a foul odor it caused). Ashes, Ashes, burning bodies of those whose lives were lost to this disease...
We all fall down - the entire population of Europe may have died if it weren't for a great fire that killed the rats who carried this disease...
First off, it seems to me very disrespectful of all those human lives that were lost (shouldn't we be helping our children to learn to value human life). Secondly, I don't want my baby to grow up singing a song and playing a game (so to speak) where they pretend to die at the end due to the symptoms of a terrible disease. How scary to think of that happening today to our children! 


Rock-A-Bye Baby - There are a couple of stories I found when researching this nursery rhyme, but neither were related to a child falling from a tree; However, regardless of whether or not there is a connection to history in this nursery rhyme, does it really seem comforting to sing our babies to sleep with a song that end in a baby falling from a tree?! I don't think that would comfort me! 


London Bridge is Falling Down - Thankfully, this song does not mention anything about injury or death, but it is said to be based upon the difficulties that were experienced in London with building and re-building a bridge over and over...and over again because of destruction by vikings and several other destructive events[2]. How disappointing for those who built that bridge...again and again... I don"t want to instill fear of bridges in my son when we live in a town with several of them! But hey, at least it teaches our kids that if they smoke a pipe they'll be able to stay up all night and get their job done!

There are others ("Humpty Dumpty," "Baa Baa Black Sheep," and "Mary, Mary, Quite Contrary" come to mind), but this is a sampling of some of the nursery rhymes I came across that send strange or negative messages to our children (or are based upon negative situations in the history of the world).

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Anyway, I get that the vast majority of the time, we sing these songs without thinking about the words or what they mean and that all of this is done in fun (I also get that there is some speculation as to whether or not all of these nursery rhymes are based upon these historical events or not). I'm not condemning anyone for singing these songs and dancing around with their kids, I just wish our nursery rhymes could be more innocent and hold more positive messages. 

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Here are some nursery rhymes that send positive messages. I want to try to focus on songs likes these when I sing to my son:

The more we get together,
Together, together;
The more we get together,
The happier we'll be.
'Cause your friends are my friends,
And my friends are your friends.
The more we get together,
The happier we'll be.


If you're happy and you know it clap your hands.
If you're happy and you know it clap your hands.
If you're happy and you know it, then your face will surely show it.
If you're happy and you know it clap your hands.
(...Stamp your feet.)
(...Snap your fingers.)
(...Shout hurray!)


Jesus loves the little children,
All the children of the world,
Red and yellow, black and white,
They are precious in His sight,
Jesus loves the little children of the world.


Row, row, row your boat,
Gently down the stream,
Merrily, merrily, merrily, merrily,
Life is but a dream.


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There are other nursery rhymes with neutral messages, but that teach babies and children, as well, such as:

"Head, Shoulders, Knees, and Toes" and "The Hokey Pokey"

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References: 

Thursday, September 22, 2011

The STRONG Opinions of Mothers

I have realized since having my son - well, really since I became pregnant with my son - how incredibly opinionated mothers, especially stay-at-home moms, can sometimes be about the countless choices we need to make for our children - as babies and as they grow older. I think it is great for mothers to be passionate about things that can help our children to succeed, to be happy and healthy and everything else, but do we have to go to the extent of condemning other mothers for making different choices than we have? I agree there are some things that are better for a baby's health than others, there are things we can do to help our babies to grow strong and healthy, there are ways we can encourage development, but to go to the extent of judging others for their choices as mothers is going too far! There is no one right answer for all the "right" things to do when raising a child. People make choices about how to raise their children based on their lives, their feelings, their thoughts, their research, and their children...it is not up to us to make them feel guilty for a choice they probably spent countless hours wondering about and researching and wrestling with and trying to decide upon.

If you are anything like me, every choice - from taking medication during pregnancy to not taking medication and suffering from dehydration and malnutrition, from whether to use a pacifier or not, from breastfeeding exclusively to bottle feeding breastmilk to formula feeding, from giving your child medications to help with issues to waiting to see if problems will them solve themselves to using more natural remedies, from circumcising to not circumcising male children, from using disposable diapers to using cloth diapers, from putting a baby in the nursery to hiring a babysitter to keeping him with you wherever you go, from demand-feeding to clock feeding, from going in to check on a baby whenever he cries to leaving him for a while to learn to self-soothe - is something you pour over reading material and discuss with others and ponder over and, eventually, make a choice on. I may not have made all the same choices as you have, and some of the choices I did make in the beginning have changed.

If I've learned anything from parenthood so far, it would be that what we decide on paper or in thought may not always end up being the best choice for our child. There have been a few times already in Roman's short life of three months that I have had small crises over the fact that what I had researched and decided upon and was so sure of and adamant about turned out to not be best for him, or in one case to be nearly impossible for him. It was extremely difficult to part with my initial decisions and to accept a new line of thought on those issues, and in some cases I have probably hesitated longer than I should have simply because I thought I knew what was best for him based on my research, not my analysis of what was happening in reality and how my baby was responding to certain choices I had made before he was even born.

Babies are unique. Families are unique. Mothers are unique. We should have the right to make a choice based on what we have learned and experienced and how we feel and how our lives run without having to answer to all the other moms out there. We should be able to make a choice and not feel we have to hide in shame over what we have chosen. As mothers we experience enough self-imposed guilt of our own; we don't need other mothers' help with that. We don't need someone to tell us after we have made a difficult decision concerning our children that we made the wrong choice. We make the choices that are best for us and best for our children. Many times we wish we could make a different decision, but life dictates differently, such as when a child is unable to breastfeed. Don't pile more guilt onto a woman who already feels inadequate as a mother. Don't cause more unjustified tears; Mothers, in general, do a good enough job of this on their own.

Join me as I journey to discover meaning and purpose in my new life as a Stay-at-Home Mom

My name is Jenny. I'm a Stay-at-Home Mom with my son, Roman, who was born on June 23, 2011. With this being my first son, I am noticing things I never had before about parenthood. One thing that has really stood out to me is how inclined I feel to devalue my role as a Stay-at-Home Mom by saying that I am "JUST" a Stay-at-Home Mom. I never hear anyone say they are "JUST" and engineer, or "JUST" a firefighter, or "JUST" an accountant. However, if I was taking care of another child all day and being paid for it, it would be considered an occupation and have a title that isn't usually prefaced with the phrase "just a" nanny or daycare worker. I have heard other Stay-at-Home Moms recently say they are searching for some significance in life and feel that they aren't accomplishing much, because they "just" stay home with their kids.

Well, I think being a Stay-at-Home Mom is a very important role and that is why, thanks to the blessing of my husband's job, I am choosing to do that with my son at this point in my life. Sometimes I don't FEEL like it's all that important, though. I want to feel like my life has meaning, and purpose, and significance as much as the next person, and I don't believe that by being a Stay-at-Home Mom I can't have all of those things in life. Our significance in life does not need to come in the form of an occupation for which we are paid. So, join me as I try to discover my significance as a Stay-at-Home Mom, and maybe some of you can walk along with me on this journey with excerpts from your own lives!