November 2011 Archive

Playing Mom’s 2nd Annual Holiday Toy Guide

Ready for some holiday shopping?

Wait, you already spent Thanksgiving night sleeping in a tent to get a great deal at Target on Black Friday? 

I’m too late and you’re already done?

Yikes.

Okay, well for those of you who know that the deals only get better as it gets closer to the holidays, I’m ready with some great suggestions for toys for kids ages 0-9.  I give you Black Friday shoppers a lot of credit for braving those crazy lines and people.  I totally understand the desire to get the hot toys before the sell out and to get those family and workplace gifts out of the way so you can avoid the December Dash.  That being said, I’ve spent the last few weeks scouring some of the top toy store and internet sites, coupled with reviews from toy experts, parents and most importantly - the kiddos themselves!  The lovely people at Toys ‘R Us and Target along with online retailer Amazon.com assured me that the merchandise that flew off the shelves over the past week will continue to be restocked daily so (for the most part) don’t fret!

I’m a fan of classic children’s movies and especially fond of books, but for the sake of brevity here, I’m going to stick with toys (no video games, either).  But please, while you’re at your favorite store or shopping online – don’t forget to grab a few books (nothing like a book to stimulate a child’s ever-growing imagination) and maybe a movie or two!

And if you are fortunate enough that you can give, please consider donating toys to children in need.  Nothing demonstrates the spirit of the holidays (and teaches children about compassion) more than the act of giving.

So without further ado, here are my choices for Top 10 Toys for Girls and Boys in 3 age categories (there is category overlap as children have different levels of fun with toys regardless of the recommended age range).  Some of these are new and trendy picks for 2011.  Enjoy and feel free to weigh in with your own reviews or add some to the list!

(Note: Some links are to specific retailers – this is in no way an endorsement for the lowest prices available, as they change daily.)

Top 10 Toys – 0-3 Years

  1. Sesame Street Let’s Rock Elmo
  2. Little People Zoo Talkers Animal Sounds Zoo
  3. LeapFrog My Own Story Time Pad
  4. VTech Touch and Learn Musical Bee
  5. Fisher Price My First Dollhouse
  6. Dora Fiesta Favorites Kitchen
  7. Fisher Price Ocean Wonders Soothe & Glow Seahorse
  8. LeapFrog Shapes and Sharing Picnic Basket
  9. Weebles Playsets
  10. Fur Real Friends Cookie

 

Top 10 Toys – 3-6 Years

  1. LeapPad Explorer
  2. Barbie Princess Charm School dolls and accessories
  3. Hot Wheels Wall Tracks
  4. Lalaloopsy Dolls, Accessories and Playsets
  5. Disney Princess Ultimate Dream Castle
  6. Fisher Price Imaginext DC Super Friends Batcave
  7. VTech Innotab
  8. Matchbox Smokey The Fire Truck
  9. Crayola Glow products
  10. Matchbox Mega Rig Shark Adventure

Top 10 Toys – 6-9 Years

  1. LEGO Ninjago Series
  2. Angry Birds Knock on Wood Game
  3. Nerf Vortex
  4. Fijit Friends
  5. Rory\’s Story Cubes
  6. LEGO City Garbage Truck and other building sets
  7. Crayola Model Magic Jewelry Studio
  8. Air Swimmers
  9. Simon Flash
  10. Hedbanz Game

If you haven’t found what you’re looking for in the lists above, you may want to look at the list below for additional ideas… (There are thousands of great classic toys that aren’t on these lists – if you want even more ideas, feel free to shoot me an e-mail.  I have lots of fun thinking of toys that will make great gifts!)

  • Cloud B Twilight Turtle/Ladybug
  • Power Wheels or Fisher Price ride-ons
  • Train sets and train table
  • Melissa and Doug puzzles, cutting food, arts and crafts, magnetic dress-up, standard unit blocks, See and Spell and more
  • Fisher Price Laugh and Learn Learning Home
  • Sit n Spin
  • My Keepon
  • Kidkraft wooden toys – dollhouses, firehouses, kitchens and more
  • Shopping cart, play food and kitchen
  • Baseball, T-Ball, football, basketball, soccer and other sports equipment
  • Lego
  • Easel and arts & crafts
  • Magic Set
  • Angry Birds Plush with Sound
  • Bikes, skates and scooters
  • Dolls and playsets
  • Perplexus
  • Action figures – Transformers, Super Heroes, etc.
  • Baby dolls, strollers and doll furniture
  • Cooking set
  • Marble run
  • My Little Pony Friendship Is Magic
  • Talking Planetarium
  • Vanity
  • Colorforms
  • LiteBrite
  • Leapfrog’s LeapPad/Leapster/Scribble and Write/Tag Reader/Text and Learn and more
  • Step 2 Up and Down Roller Coaster
  • Fisher Price Brilliant Basics Baby’s First Blocks
  • Learn & Groove Musical Table
  • Piano/keyboard/guitar/drums and other instruments
  • Cash register
  • Doctor’s kit
  • Monster High
  • Nerf
  • Teaching time clock
  • Styling head
  • Rocking horse
  • Fashion studio/car studio with lightbox
  • Puppet Theatre
  • Karaoke machine
  • Radio Flyer wagons
  • Stomp rockets
  • Snap n Style
  • Cardboard playhouse
  • Telescope
  • Snap Circuits SC-300
  • School set/responsibility chart
  • Playskool Alphie
  • Lite Sprites
  • Bananagrams, Blokus, Qwirkle, Bop It, Chutes and Ladders, Spot It, Scrabble Flash and other board games
  • Plasmacar
  • Digital camera – Kid Tough See Yourself camera
  • Fridge Phonics/Fridge DJ
  • Tunnels and tents
  • Imaginext playsets
  • Train sets, cars, buses, planes and things that go
  • Easy Bake Oven
  • Talking USA Map/geography puzzles
  • Science kits
  • Zillionz Savings Goal ATM
  • Musical Pass the Pickle
  • R/C Cars and Trucks
  • Soccer Guys/Baseball Guys, etc.
  • Polly Pockets
  • Art table
  • Dress up clothes and accessories
  • Tea set
  • Shrinky Dinks
  • Lacing toys
  • Make your own jewelry sets
  • Pillow Pets/Happy Nappers
  • Laptop
  • Purse/wallet
  • Sticker books
  • Toolbench and tools/construction set
  • Zoobles
  • Vtech Mobigo
  • Play Doh, Moon Dough
  • Animal Planet
  • Eduscience

 HAPPY SHOPPING, EVERYONE!

 

 

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Keeping the Giving in Thanksgiving

Many of you have been following the wonderful initiative that Jill Smokler of Scary Mommy started last week – helping struggling families enjoy a much-needed Thanksgiving dinner by way of donations from her readers and Twitter followers. It challenges our perception of the definition of hunger in America and reminds us all to appreciate what we have and recognize the good in others. In case you missed it, here are the videos from Good Morning America on Thursday followed by Nightline on Friday. Even Alexa got a piece of the action! I hope you all had a wonderful holiday weekend!

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Posted by Dani in The Playbook

Gobble Gobble

Happy Thanksgiving, everyone!  Counting my blessings, big and small.

Enjoy today – wherever it takes you.

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Posted by Dani in Holiday stuff

Top 5 Things I’m Thankful For in 2011

I returned home after a long but fun-filled day and began my usual Sunday night routine - check e-mail, some mindless scrolling on Facebook, fulfill some orders for Princessories and then a quick look ahead at the upcoming week on my calendar…

WAIT!  What is that big pink circle around Monday, November 21?

Is it here already?!?!

IT’S MY SITS DAY!

If you haven’t found yourself here by way of The SITS Girls site, let me tell you a little bit about it (and if you are here via SITS – welcome and thank you for your support!!)  The SITS Girls are a group of 10,000 women bloggers dedicated to supporting one another by leaving comments on each other’s blogs.  It is one of the first things you hear about when becoming a blogger.  If you scroll down a little bit, you’ll see the SITS Girls button on this site.  To get my turn as Featured Blogger after only a year of blogging is thrilling to me!  Check out the site today to see my bio and a few of my favorite posts.

For my Feature Day, I wanted to write about something deeply personal but I tend to get super lengthy and would rather not have you fall asleep on the keyboard, so I’ll keep it light since this may be your first visit to Playing Mom.  It’s Thanksgiving Week, so it only seems appropriate to share with you (in no particular order) the Top 5 Things I’m Thankful For in 2011:

5. Weight Watchers.  When you get to the point where you leave the house in sweats every day because you don’t feel like buying clothes in yet another size (and you think it looks good because people will think you just left the gym) it’s good to know there’s somewhere you can go to regain control.  My excellent eating habits included skipping meals, eating the kids’ leftovers before getting started on my own dinner, forgetting to drink water and grabbing whatever was in reach when I felt hungry.  I joined the day before Halloween for good reason.  I couldn’t say with certainty that I wouldn’t finish off a plastic orange pumpkin full of candy in less than a week.  I’m happy to report that I’m down 9.2 pounds in 3 weeks.

4. My calendar.  It is my brain spilled out on paper, color-coded for special occasions.  Without it, I would do something idiotic like forget my SITS Day was coming until 10pm the night before.  (Oops – maybe I should keep it in the car?)

3. Friends and Family.  There’s nothing quite like spending time with friends, even more so after having kids.  Maybe it’s just that I talk to a 1-year-old all day and when I do “work” it’s at home, but spending quality time alone with my close friends feels like a breath of fresh air.  I love the freedom of going out and being someone other than Mommy for a few hours.  I never get tired of adventures and catch-up conversations and sharing issues and news good and bad with someone I trust.  It is important and necessary and wonderful to love and connect with friends.

My husband Cory and my kids Ryan and Alexa are the funniest, cutest and most amazing people that I know.  Each year their stock goes up.  I could not be luckier or more proud of them.  Cory and I have been together for almost 15 years and married for 8 1/2.  He is still my very best friend who has seen me not only at my best, but also in my darkest days and has always showered me with unwavering love and support.  I knew with 100% certainty when we were dating that he would make a wonderful Daddy one day.  He has delivered to infinity and beyond.  We come from two close-knit families that seamlessly merged into one and I thank my lucky stars every day for being surrounded by such supportive and loving people.

2. Naps and Iced Coffee.  These two go hand in hand - let’s start with naps.  These magical, fleeting moments of slumber are a sure addiction.  It’s no coincidence that my maiden name loosely rhymes with “Napperman” and my current last name with “Sleeperman”.  I am a night owl, staying up until the wee hours of the morning until my own clock smacks me in the face and snarkily reminds me that I have children to attend to.  So, like a Kindergartner, I take my mandatory daily resting time so I don’t become Miss Crankypants.

Onto iced coffee.  I like to say that each day is a new beginning, an opportunity to change and grow and see the world through a fresh lens.  But that lens is blurry, cracked and dismal without caffeine.  Thank you, Dunkin’ Donuts and Starbucks.  Whichever one is closer and has a drive-thru window.

1. It was a toss-up between Phillies baseball, frozen chocolate-covered bananas, Zoloft, children’s television shows, my iPhone, good health, 80′s music, sushi, Words With Friends, the cold side of the pillow, massages, summertime, my frittata maker, Facebook and Bobbi Brown concealer but I think I’m gonna toss that aside and go with YOU.  Although I started this blog with the intent of it being an online family diary of sorts, I am thankful that all of you have taken this journey with me and supported me through e-mails, suggestions, comments and the sharing of your own experiences.  I know I like to intertwine humor and sarcasm in my writing, but I honestly couldn’t have imagined such a wonderful support system.  Blogging = free therapy.  I’m even thankful for the negative comments, it helps me to see a different point of view or learn something new about myself and my own reactions to criticism.

So, that’s my short list.  I’d love to know what YOU’RE thankful for this year…

Thanks for stopping by to help celebrate my SITS Day!

Dani

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A Thanksgiving Dinner for Everyone (via Scary Mommy)

Hi everyone.

If you’ve never heard of Jill Smokler a.k.a. Scary Mommy, you really should check her out.  She has one of the most successful blogs on the planet – is working on a book due out on Mother’s Day next year and has amazing brand endorsement deals  because of her humor, honesty and great heart.  She is also my best friend’s best friend from high school.  Did that make sense? 

Anyway, Jill is using her amazing influence to make sure that families in need have a Happy Thanksgiving this year.  If you are in need of support or have $25 to give, Jill will match you up with a family.  She is closing requests at midnight, even though she is finding it difficult to end the thread due to the overwhelming interest.  So please click on over to Scary Mommy – A Thanksgiving Dinner for Everyone if you can.

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Posted by Dani in Holiday stuff

Ummm, thanks?

Special thanks to Not Winning Mom of the Year for choosing Playing Mom as a Liebster Blog Award recipient. 

Now I must say, I was like “What the heck is a Liebster Blog Award?” and “I don’t have any money to give” but knowing that Not Winning Mom of the Year is legit, coupled with a quick Google search, I realized that I could put the taser down.

The Liebster Blog Award is given to new-ish bloggers with less than 200 followers who could use some extra support.  Which is totally ironic, because at last check on my hidden, super secret tracker there were slightly under 700 of you - not like celebrity proportions, but pretty solid.  I’m guessing I was chosen because she likes my writing and realizes that NOBODY COMMENTS and feels awful for me.  Or something like that.

Here are the rules:

1. Copy and paste the Award on your blog
2. Thank the giver, and link back the blogger who gave it to you
3. Reveal your Top 5 picks – let them know by leaving a comment on their blog
4. Hope that your followers will spread the love to other bloggers

Soooo… this is kind of like a pyramid scheme so although I am honored that I was chosen, I cannot think of five new bloggers that I read because I am:

a. Both illiterate AND don’t have any time to read

b. Only interested in the established, popular bloggers in hopes of stealing their content and becoming rich off of them one day

Okay, okay – let me think…

1. Tara from The Crankiness Crusher was introduced to me from a college friend.  She is so positive that she will make even your worst moment seem sprinkled with sunshine.  It’s her job.  Check her out.

2. Carrie of  Twinsplicity is a friend of a friend with 1 year old twin girls.  She’s new to the blogging scene and hopes to help Moms of multiples get through the overwhelmingly tough beginning (and beyond) by sharing her experience from conception through the present.  Stop by and say hello!

That’s it.  I hate to break the rules, but I only have two.  I don’t want to pretend I read anything else and I really need to go eat dinner.  Oh, and add “Liebster Blog Award recipient” to my resume.

I got some more awesome news today which I can’t share quite yet, but I’m gonna need help in the meantime.  I need to write a kick-a$$ post one week from today and I am not sure what to write about.  Anyone have ideas?

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Quotable

Children are the living messages we send to a time we will not see. — Unknown

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Posted by Dani in The Playbook

Bullies Beware

Let me start by saying that Ryan is the funniest, cutest, sweetest little boy that I know.  He is goofy, athletic, friendly, social and polite (most of the time). 

He is also extremely sensitive. 

He gets it from both parents.  And it is bothering one of his parents right now much more than the other. 

Cory gets really upset when Ryan comes to him crying that someone was mean to him, said “I don’t like you”, “You’re not my best friend” or some other preschool insult.  It breaks my heart, too, but I’ve had more experience with it – at playdates, on the playground.  I also have the knowledge that Ryan has said these things to other boys as well, so I know it goes both ways, even though as time goes on, I see a wonderful maturity and empathy progressing in his dealings with peers. 

It’s difficult not to take it personally, to wonder why another child thinks yours isn’t good enough or cool enough.  But as you, the parent, get lost in your own painful thoughts and memories and do your best not to pick up the kid and shake him or her, that same child then grabs yours and shrieks, “Let’s go play hide and seek!” and all is forgotten in Little Kid World. 

I always thought that raising a little girl would be the worst with the bullying, name-calling and worth-leveling based on unattainable standards of beauty.  I figured if a boy is somewhat athletic and/or social and has interests of some sort, he’s in the clear.  But it is difficult for both.  I have girlfriends whose young boys are taunted because they’re too short, too smart, too weak, too into dinosaurs. 

Even though it hurts the same to a child, this preschool stuff is so benign compared to what kids endure when they’re older, which makes me worry about how Cory (and I) will react to the bigger stuff.  Our boy is sensitive.  That will one day be a wonderful gift.  In friendships, with girls, in dealing with younger kids and people less fortunate.  With certain friends, he’s the tough guy and a leader – the one with all the ideas.  With other friends, he’s the follower – hanging onto the other kid’s every word.  Aren’t we all this way in different social situations? 

I don’t think there’s any “toughening up” that can be done.  It’s in his makeup to be upset and take it personally if someone says something negative towards him.  I’m the same way.  I think it’s just that young children don’t have the tools, the proper language, to defend themselves properly or handle an uncomfortable situation. 

So they turn to parents.  And what do we say?

I’ve heard parents say anything from “Hit him back” to “Walk away” to “Play with someone who’s nicer to you” to “Tell him he sucks at football, too”. 

I’m a big proponent of telling Ryan that whoever hurt his feelings is probably having a bad day, that other people don’t have the right to define him, to work it out fairly with the other kid.  But really, I have no answer.  He’s going to get hurt.  He’s going to want to follow the kid who hurt him.  There was a kid last year who wasn’t very nice yet Ryan idolized him.  He’s going to be confused as to why some kids are mean sometimes and nice other times. 

I was in a clique of three BFF’s in the 3rd grade and one day the “Queen Bee” decided that she and the other girl would sit alone together at lunch and I would not be invited.  I remember I could not concentrate that day or any day that week.  I went home crying that my world was shattered, that I lost my best friend and I was a loser.  To this 8 year old, it was the lowest I had ever felt.

I caught up with Queen Bee on Facebook last year and we were having a lovely time reconnecting.  Turns out we had much in common and she was quite the beautiful soul.  But instead of forgetting the past and acting like a mature adult moving forward, we got to talking about bullying and girls and I couldn’t forget that experience of being odd girl out.  After considering a good way to say it, I somehow blurted, “Yeah, I remember when you were really mean to me in 3rd grade, too” or something equally as dumb and pointless.  She was silent for so long that I knew immediately I said the wrong thing.  Why did I feel the need to bring up something her 8 year old self did?  Did a part of me want her to know that she hurt me?  To feel bad?  To apologize?  What good would that do now?

She explained that she had a hard time connecting with other girls as a kid for different reasons, that she knows she wasn’t nice and she hid behind her insecurities but that it was just as hurtful for me to say this now, after all these years.  And I agree.  She also pointed out that I also did my fair share of hurting, yet I don’t remember that side of it at all.  I haven’t forgotten what she said and never will, just like in the third grade.  I wish I never said it and I’m sorry.  Something in me just had to say something, but I know it was wrong and I can’t take it back. 

I wish I could tell Ryan and Alexa that no matter what their fate is in elementary, junior and high school, that all will be forgotten when they are adults.  And that they should move forward and forget, too.  That although the memories of experiences both good and bad will be a part of them, they will one day be reconnected with all of these kids through Facebook or the grapevine, and they will be celebrated for their differences and none of this will matter.  Being the most popular kid or star of the football team won’t guarantee you anything.  It’s about believing in your own self-worth and not letting anyone else define you. 

I don’t know the answer, but I do know that we can’t shield our kids from ever getting hurt.  The closest I can get is what my parents said to me as I was growing up, which I never forgot.  I think this is why I always had good self-esteem and I pray that I can pass this onto my children…

That to race would be futile because no matter who you are, there will always be someone more popular, more beautiful, wealthier, more athletic.  But you don’t know their lives.  They could be suffering.  They may not be happy.  But if they are, it doesn’t matter because I am an amazing person and I have wonderful and special qualities and talents that make me who I am.  And I should never want to trade that with anyone.  Because nobody else is quite like me. 

I hope I can assist in making my children believe that about themselves.  Because I still believe it about me.  Which makes it easier to celebrate others’ successes because I know it’s not a race, as much as it seems that way sometimes.  And one day, I hope both Ryan and Alexa find their unique match – someone who appreciates their uniqueness and their beauty (from the inside out).  Because nothing feels better than being loved.  And loving yourself.

Bullies Beware.

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Posted by Dani in Boys, Girls, Parenting and tagged with , ,

Bellies and Nails and Ears… Oh My!

I admit – I’ve been totally MIA.  I’m coordinating this event at Ryan’s school in a few weeks where I’m also a vendor and between that, the kids and the biz, I’m realizing how much I suck at multitasking.  (Cory yelling in the background that I suck at laundry, too.)

Here’s what you missed:

1. I joined Weight Watchers because all of my excuses ran out I know it works.  The fracture in my foot healed so exercise was once again an option and I could no longer make sense of why I needed to buy all new winter clothes EVERY year for the past 6 years.  So now I sit on Saturday mornings with my emotional-eating-comrades and so far so good.  Week 1, down 6 lbs.  But I’m terrified to eat outside of my house without my little scale and my nutritional labels.  Baby steps. 

2. I got acrylic nails for the first time in 5 years.  I am tired of chewing on my nails (I don’t know how many WW points they would be anyway – it’s not in the book) and it just makes me feel better to look at them all shiny and long.  Except the manicurist must cut them down next time.  Making hair bows is more difficult, as is taking out my contacts and picking my nose.  All important things.

3. I have been so slow responding to your reader letters.  Here is one I thought I would highlight, even though I’m pretty sure I didn’t answer the question correctly. 

“Since you have a boy and a girl, what noticeable differences (if any) can you tell between the sexes at this age?”

Aside from their genitals, which are noticeably different, I’d say that although Ryan gravitates toward traditional “boy” toys and Alexa to traditional “girl” toys, I think it’s all a crock and may have to do more with environment than people think.   They are both extremely active children who love the others’ toys just as much if not more.  My son said “after Spiderman, I want to be Rainbow Dash for Halloween” and my daughter is obsessed with superheroes and anything with wheels.  The only reason Alexa acts “girly” is because after I put her in some ridiculous tutu or costume, I gush over how pretty she is and march her right to the mirror because I am pushing my “I wish I was girly instead of tomboyish as a child” issues onto her.  I do think kids are very much a product of their environment, although I do notice how Alexa likes pretty, shiny things and Ryan likes to be rough-and-tumble.  We, as parents, are the ones who introduce the ideas of colors, toys, shows and other things as being masculine or feminine.  Oh, and I don’t want to forget birth order.  Instead of sitting still and coloring like Ryan’s girl friends did at this age, Alexa runs around like a nut most of the day.  I’m assuming her older brother has something to do with it.

4. My daughter has her 5th ear infection in 4 months.  If this stronger antibiotic doesn’t work, we have to at least look into an ENT appt.  I’m certain this is affecting her hearing and/or speech which is only going to prolong her currently awesome tantrums when she can’t express herself as the months go by.  Oh, and of course her pain.  We no likey the pain and the screaming. 

Ugh, damn, I can’t scratch the inside of my ear with these nails, either!

Okay, off to watch Up All Night from last week and then stay up all night procrastinating and doing minimal work – YAY!

xoxo,

D

 

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Long Island Parent Source – Parent Panel

Just wanted to give myself a quick shout out (can you even give yourself a shout out?) for being selected one of the 8 Parent Panel members on Long Island Parent Source.com – an online community where I’ll be reviewing products and events, blogging about family life and much more. 

Please check out the site at www.longislandparentsource.com and see the Parent Panel announcement here.

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