Happy Mother’s Day to You!

Daniela helped paint the flowers and I assembled.

Daniela helped paint the flowers and I assembled.

 

Three years ago I was pregnant

Mother’s Day 2010, I remember being ill and thinking I was just fighting another bought of kidney stones. I remember dropping off a plant to my mom and her telling me that I looked like shit. For about two weeks prior to Mother’s Day, I was hugging the toilet bowl and refusing to see a doctor because the stones were going to go away. I remember our dog JuanGa, not leaving my side as I battled these kidney stones. The week after Mother’s Day came and I finally said to Raul,  ”Let’s call Freddy” our friend who lived close by and a doctor. I remember going to get blood work on a Friday and the next day Raul opening up the results. Before our friend could come over and read them, we read that we were going to be parents. It seems so long ago, but it wasn’t.

I was shocked, stunned, cried, and was in denial for a long time. I was not ready for the commitment and change but it was going to happen. It was our choice to be parents and we had been told by several people that in 2010 we were going to be the parents of a girl. I was skeptical about the news but Daniela was born later that year. I had to see her to believe that she was really coming. When I went on vacation with Raul, before Daniela was born, I remember a man telling me that I was going to know what love really was when Daniela arrived. I of course was like, yeah that is what they tell me. I was seven months pregnant and scared to admit that perhaps his words and the words of others were going to be true.

Daniela shows me in all sorts of ways that she loves me; she rubs my toe or arm when I bump into something and she asks,  ”Estas Bien? Te Duele? ” Her instinct to help kicks in and I know that one day she will pay it forward to others. She helps me get in and out of the shower and hands me my towel. She will lick me instead of kiss me and laughs about it when I say, “Yuck.”  All the things we do for her, she is doing with us. It is amazing how she interacts with JuanGa and gives him rubs when he hears a strange noise. I think my biggest fear was accepting this change and it took me a long time to realize that she was here to stay. I count my blessings everyday that she is walking, screaming, crying, learning, and loving us. With help from other women and Raul, I started to learn how to appreciate those special moments where she showed me compassion and love.

My cooking assistant

Since I became a mom, all these little ideas come out of my head of what we could do to teach Daniela all sorts of things from painting, to crafting, singing, dancing, and even real life situations. I remember having a conversation with my neighbors about potty training Daniela. I told them she was attempting it but that we were not pushing her to do so. I did mention how she was learning other things like cutting mushrooms, tomatoes, and even helping me bake. I am glad that she learned how to cut because for a few days I was not able to cook or bend my fingers due to an injury. Daniela stepped up to the challenge of helping me until her grandma arrived from Connecticut for a visit. One of the neighbor’s mentioned that I was probably glad I taught Daniela how to cut instead of using the bathroom. Although my girl was not potty trained, I am glad the neighbor realized that Daniela was helping me with everyday chores. (She used a plastic knife with supervision from me, I gave her a pot, she put all ingredients in the pot, and I stirred.)

Never thought I'd see a little one next to mine.

Never thought I’d see a little one next to mine.

Strong Women all around me

Since moving to an apartment complex, I have been blessed to have women who are moms to children of all ages and moms to four-legged, sentient beings. We have had conversations of all types and I was missing that type of bond with women since I moved to Puerto Rico. I have kept in touch with all the strong women from my childhood and adulthood; some who are moms, soon-to-be moms, some who aren’t, those who have chosen to adopt their husband’s children, and those who are moms to four-legged beings.

I have met new women and their families via social platforms and community groups. I read about the triumphs and when they have hit roadblocks and I feel as though we are all on the same journey of making the most of what is in front of us. I read about women making the best decisions they can for their children whether it be with their spouses, partners, co-parents, or by themselves.

If you want to read about strong women and what they do every day to ensure the happiness and health of their children and how they support other women and families, please consider joining these groups on Facebook and wishing them a Happy Mother’s Day:

An Angel for Ellie : Hilary and Jim update their surviving twin daughter’s progress on a daily basis. Her name is Ellie. Read about how they were diagnosed with TTTS and their journey thus far. A little angel guides Ellie from above and her name is Gracie.

Nick Collazo Stay Strong Fight Hard Team Nicholas : Lillian and Luis are from my hometown in Connecticut. Their son is battling childhood cancer. Their oldest daughter is a survivor. This is a very strong family with a wonderful community of friends and family holding benefits for them in order to help them financially and emotionally.

TTTS : This stands for Twin to Twin Transfusion Syndrome. Our parent mentors, Vanessa and Gabriel, started this group on Facebook to support other families that have gone through or are currently going through the same experience. Jesus guides their surviving twin, Gustavo, from above. These families are amazing and if you follow the group, you will see what community and family really means.

Imani Corbin Erbs Palsy Fight : Maritza and Sebastian are family members currently navigating the world of Erb’s Palsy with their daughter Imani. I wrote about her and she finally had her surgery today. This is going to be a long road for my family members, but I have faith that Imani will come out winning.

Happy Mother’s Day to all of you!

Imani’s Erb’s Palsy Fight

Imani's New Cast

Donate

UPDATE 02-27-2013 I spoke to our cousin last night and he is still looking for donations for Imani’s surgery. The insurance company confirmed that $1500.00 or possibly more, will be their out-of-pocket expense. The money already donated will go to that but they still need money for co-pays, travel, hotel, and food expenses. Any donations are still welcome as they try to raise enough funds to cover the cost of the trip or any unforeseeable circumstances. Please consider donating at least $5.00 to Imani’s donation fund on @You_Caring. We thank all of those who have already donated and shared this information with their communities. 

UPDATE 02-09-2013 : We have great news! We just checked the donations page and saw that the goal was met and even surpassed! People are still donating to Imani and her family! Please continue to share this news.

As I said in one comment from another family going through the same Erb’s Palsy Fight, “It takes a community to help. I am just doing a small part.” But we can continue to bring awareness because there are other families going through the same thing with their children and it also happens to adults. 

Thanks to @You_Caring for tracking our progress and communicating with us via Twitter and Facebook. 

 

We usually write about our own children at Papaheroes and the things we learn from them during our parenthood journey. From time to time other people’s children have taught us lessons in life and we have shared their stories on the blog. Children like Caine Monroy who built an arcade out of cardboard amazed us because of his talent and drive to create something fun out of scraps.  Jaden’s Mini-Orbiter search during Christmas had us elated when @BabyEinstein pulled through to deliver this discontinued toy for Christmas.

The Corbin Family

Imani Corbin holds a special place in my heart because she is family. My cousin Sebastian and his wife Maritza brought little Imani into this world in June of 2012. I had been in communication with my cousin via Facebook since 2010 and unfortunately one of the last times I saw my cousin was for his dad’s funeral.

Sebastian and Maritza were going to bless the family with another  little girl. Their lives were changed when Imani was diagnosed with Erb’s Palsy . Since her diagnosis, she has gone to therapy with her mom and dad and visited several doctor’s specializing in this field.

Boston Bound to Children’s Hospital

This past  Sunday while millions of families were glued to the Superbowl game, my cousins were driving from Connecticut to Boston, Massachusetts to see Peter M. Waters, MD, Chief of Clinical Orthopedics at Children’s Hospital Boston.

Imani after her long road trip from Connecticut to Boston

Imani after her long road trip from Connecticut to Boston

 

At the appointment, they were told that Imani would have to undergo surgery to help repair/replace her C5, C6 and some C7 nerves on March 29th. Here is a video to help you understand what Erb’s Palsy is from Dr. Waters. You can continue viewing more videos on the same channel on YouTube regarding Erb’s Palsy.

 

A little help goes a long way

Being told that your young baby has to have surgery can become stressful and emotional for a family. Sebastian, Maritza, and Imani have chosen to fight! I know that parents find strength from deep within their souls when the average person buckles under the slightest pressures of life. The drive my cousin and his wife have to make sure Imani is given the best care is something I admire. When I read about how they would have to go to Boston for the surgery, I thought that maybe as a community of friends and family, we could help them out.

Erb's Palsy Awareness

Imani’s Erb’s Palsy Bracelet. See post for details on purchasing.

 

My cousin has set up a donations page for travel, lodging, food, tolls, co-pays, and other expenses for this trip from Connecticut to Massachusetts. A little help goes a long way and if you would like to help them out, just go to this link  and donate the amount you can. Even if you can’t donate, join Imani’s Facebook page and follow her progress and journey. The family is also selling Erb’s Palsy Awareness bracelets for $20.00. Five of those dollars will go to Imani’s fund. Inquire about the bracelets with my cousins via Facebook.

Donate

I will definitely be updating you with Imani’s progress and hope that this surgery in March is successful. We know that the road to recovery is going to be long, but I know many friends and family members will be there for Imani and her parents.

If you know of successful surgeries and recoveries, please share them with us in the comments below or share them with Imani on her Facebook page.

Photo credit to My cousin Sebastian and wife Maritza.

Help Imani and her Parents

with the fight against Erb’s Palsy.

Donate

Setting Up Your Child’s Room for Success

Guest post from one of our friends and parent heroes “Candace Vorhaus”

Recently a teacher friend asked me about the best ways to set up her child’s room to enhance success in school.  I thought about my own children’s rooms and the important role their bedroom plays in their growth, development, success and happiness in school.  So, I asked her to consider four C3D Feng Shui aspects of her child’s room: the color, clutter, ch’i (life force energy), and design elements.

Color

The colors chosen for your child’s room can profoundly affect their IQ and intelligence according to a study by the State of California (http://www.excellence.dgs.ca.gov/MaxStPerformance/S4_4-2.htm).  Blacks, whites and grays can adversely affect a child’s IQ, making them feel dull, while a sunny yellow can stimulate and awaken the mind.  An overactive child will do well in a room with calming light blues and aqua’s while accents of bright reds and oranges can stimulate their minds and actually raise their IQ.  Chocolate brown colors will leave children feeling warm, cozy and loved.

Clutter

The constant clutter that plagues most children’s rooms can be distracting and block their forward progress.  Set up area’s in your child’s room where they can easily store their toys when they are finished playing.  Model how you want your children to keep their room by keeping your own room neat.  When things get really out of hand, make cleaning up and organizing a joint venture.  Kids tend to get overwhelmed quickly and give up when it comes to organizing their things.  Set a time each week for kids to clean their room.  For example say, “You need to pick up these toys before dinner.” Or, “Put away your clothes before you go to play on Saturday mornings.”

Ch’i

Keep the ch’i (life force energy) high in their rooms to keep them feeling uplifted and happy.  You can do this by bringing in a green plant or two.  Nature energy is very uplifting and the green plants will give off healthy oxygen.  Also, have fun, colorful art on their walls.  Avoid violent or scary images that can be found in posters of movies and video games.  That will really lower their ch’i and can make them feel angry or anxious.

Design your child’s room layout so their bed is in the commanding position.  That is, the bed is placed against the wall opposite the door, but not inline with the door.  Sleep is more peaceful because energetically they’re in command of their space.  If the bed can’t be moved, another option is strategically placing a mirror so your child can see the door opening from their bed.

Most importantly, create a world for your child that is different from the rest of the house, where children can go to lose themselves in study, constructive play, or contemplation.

For more C3D Feng Shui information and a complimentary Feng Shui Ba Gua, head over to Candace’s website: candacevorhaus.com

More on Candance

Candace Vorhaus is a leading Feng Shui expert, spiritual coach, and classically trained interior designer.  Candace is the founder of C3D Feng Shui, which compassionately incorporates Color, Clutter management, Ch’i (life force energy), and Design into every project, both domestically and abroad.  Candace believes focusing on the C3D of your personal space is the missing link to lifelong fulfillment and achieving your highest potential. 

            With over 20 years of design and Feng Shui experience, along with direct teachings from the founder and leader of BTB Feng Shui, the late Feng Shui Grandmaster Professor Thomas Lin Yun, Candace is a professional colorist and widely recognized as a leading Feng Shui authority in the West.

            Candace grew up in Garden City, New York, and after receiving her BA in English Literature from Gettysburg College; she received an A.S. in Interior Design from the Parson’s School of Design, in New York City.  Candace also trained extensively at the Musée des Arts Décoratif at the Louvre in Paris, France.

             Upon completing her interior design studies, Candace trained under celebrated interior designer, Juan Montoya, before launching her own successful interior design business, Candace Connors Interior Design, where she was featured in Better Homes and Gardens, among other publications.

Candace also spent an intensive seven years of spiritual training and transformation under the private tutelage of world-renowned spiritual coach and mystic, Glorynn Ross, and Barbara Brennan School of Healing practitioner, Irene Rebecca Bodendorf.

A member of the International Association of Women in Business Coaching, Candace is married to Robbie Vorhaus, a communications strategist, and lives in Sag Harbor, New York, with their two children, and very cute dog, Ollie.  

@Gin_Elie ‘s Potty Nightmare

Photo by Peaches from Positively Peaches

This is a guest post from my good friend @Gin_Elie.

Ah, the joys of parenting! Especially if you’re a first-timer. The expectations… the questions… the answers that you’ll only find for yourself. When you become a parent for the first time, you always ask your friends and family for advise. But no child is like the other and none of them come with an owner’s manual. Especially when it comes to potty training.

I remember when I was teaching my daughter to go to the potty. She was 3 years-old, a little late for some. And yes, I asked for advise and tried to follow most of them like: letting my child come with me into the bathroom and watch me sit; explain to her why it is important to let go of the diaper; let her pee on herself and tell her to help you clean up, and so on. Somehow, she was very afraid of the toilet! She avoided it as if it were a monster! I googled for similar situations, read every answer to every question and I tried them all without success. I felt so frustrated and unaccomplished, and she could also feel my frustration!

Then, my brother-in-law said the simplest thing: “Don’t worry, she won’t be using diapers in College!” Wow! At first I thought it was the most ridiculous comment anyone had ever said to me. And then I got it! All he meant was to be patient, to take it easy on the child. Let her be, she’ll get it soon enough. So I just relaxed and stopped pressuring her!

She wouldn’t announce she had to go do “#1″. So the incident was always a surprise. She knew it was wrong, she always appologized. Then slowly she started to let me know, although still afraid of the toilet.

Then, the day came. It was a saturday. We were going sailing on my dad’s boat. I sensed she had to go (mother’s instinct), on the floor of my dad’s sailboat! “NO!” I screamed to myself. “Not here!” We were standing in front of the boat’s “head” (that’s how they call a boat’s toilet) so I just grabbed her, sat her down on it and she let go… with a smile! I said: “See? Nothing was going to happen. Wasn’t it easier on the toilet?”. “Yes, mommy. It was!”, she replied with amazement. One down… #2 to go!

Now that one was even harder!!! Months went by and the only way she would do #2 was on her diaper. She knew it was easier on the toilet, so why was she not trying? Here we go again, the advises, the research… the torture!

DaddyKnows #48: Happy Mother’s Day!

20120428-215845.jpg

It’s the thought that counts, right?

Happy Mother’s Day

Daniela lend me her hands for this.

I celebrated Mother’s Day for the first time May 9, 2010 because unbeknownst to me ( I was puking my brains out and I thought the baby was a kidney stone) I was pregnant. Last year we celebrated Mother’s Day with my mom, grandmother, cousin, Raul’s mom, and grandmother.

My daughter was able to spend time with both grandmothers Migdalia and Sylvette and great-grandmothers Generosa and Lydia (something that not many children get to do.) Unfortunately our daughter’s other great-grandmother America, passed away last year but she was able to see her via video chat. It isn’t the same thing but we couldn’t all afford to take a plane and visit her before she died.

My Favorite Dish that mom used to make for me

Amongst the many things that I love about my mother, is her cooking. When I was eating animal proteins (I stopped for health reasons), my favorite dish was her version of Southern Fried Chicken and home-made French fries. The chicken always came out crispy and she fried an endless amount of French fries. As she took the French fries out of the frying pan, I would eat and burn my tongue because I wanted to eat them hot.

Being that we are raising our daughter to be a vegetarian (if later on she wants to eat meat, I won’t hold that against her) the part of the dish that I make for my daughter is home made French Fries. She loves them and dips them in her bbq sauce, ketchup, and tzatiziki sauce.

So I asked a question on some of the platforms I use about the dish that people cook for themselves or their kids that their mom cooked for them.

Here are some of the responses I recieved from the Latino Rebels, my cousins, and Twitter.

Letty: Arroz con gandules. Even if we use the same ingredients my sister, my mom and myself each make a different tasting dish. All yummy of course.

Rodrigo: Lomo Saltado, SALCHIPAPAS , which they all love already.

Tony:  For us, that’s easy: Paella… Because 1) it’s a bitch to get the rice just right in the first place and 2) you can find the proper ingredients here. We make other, typical dishes regularly like Tortilla de Patata, Cocido Madrileño, Lentejas Españolas with greater success but paella is a harder to make.

Josh:  Poor mans tuna helper… wavy lays chips, mac and chesse, and some tuna…bangin

Hector: Arroz con pollo

Tarsha: Fried chicken and pancakes or salmon crokets and home made biscuits ummm.

OptOutReplay: A very Basic and easy rice and beans. NO refined white rice. I can use jasmin,basmati,brown rice and many others that are quality complex carbs. (This was on our Veglatino Twitter feed so I did modify the question to state a vegetarian or vegan dish modified.)

My Wish for Mother’s Day

I hope that you all get to spend time with your mothers, offer a special blessing for those mom’s who have passed, or spend time with women who have stepped in to guide you as your mom would have if she is gone or if you no longer have a relationship with mom.

Since I have a daughter, my only hope for her is that if she has a child in the future, that she can make one of my dishes for her too. I am not the best cook but I sure can make a mean carrot cake just ask my biggest critic my sister Milta.

Happy Mother’s Day to My mother Migdalia, my sisters Milta and Veronica, my friends, and cousins. I love and miss you all. Thanks for all of the motherly advice you have provided to me throughout my first year as part of your hood; motherhood.

Thanks to Daniela for helping me make the HandPrint Flower Card.

 

Thank You Mom By Debbie Bongiovanni

This is a guest post and poem from Debbie Bongiovanni for our Mother’s Day Memories Series 2012 .

Thank You Mom

Thank You Mom

Thank you Mom,
For everything you have done,
Thank you Mom,
For making each day so much fun.

Thank you Mom,
For showing me the way,
Thank you Mom,
For smiling every day.

Thank you Mom,
For always being there,
Thank you Mom,
For showing how much you care.

Thank you Mom,
You’re the very best,
Thank you Mom,
Because you’re none like the
rest.

So this day is so special,
Because you’re so special too,
Just remember one thing,
That I do love you.

Happy Mother’s Day!

Thanks to Debbie for submitting this poem! 

Photo by Green Wellies .

Madre by @RSCSpokenWord

This is a guest post and poem written by Rodrigo Sanchez-Chavarria for our Mother’s Day Memories 2012 series.

Mother and child Photo by Andrew MacDonald

Madre

Ponme cerca de tu Corazón

Para sentir el latido

El calor que me das

Dame las caricias

Que nunca te dieron

Enséñame como caminar con orgullo

Protégeme con tus palabras

Dime cuanto te hago falta

Ríe conmigo

Olvídate de tus males

Dame de comer de tu espíritu luminoso

Enséñame como querer como tu

Cuéntame tus sueños

Tus Milagros

Llora conmigo

Soy tu esponja

Enséñame

Enséñame

Camina conmigo

Tomemos pasos juntos

Crea nuevos lenguajes solo para nosotros

Alardea tus ambiciones

Habla de las riquezas que tienen los libros

Cuéntame de los antepasados para siempre saber

De donde vengo para poder llevarlos conmigo siempre

Y siempre mantenme cerca de tus latidos

Porque para mi

Eres todo y mas

Y siempre te llevare conmigo.

You can find Rodrigo on Twitter @RSCSpokenWord

Music: http://www.rscspokenword.bandcamp.com

Palabrista:  http://www.palabristas.org

Blog: http://www.mnwordslinger.com

Photo by Andrew MacDonald