Monday, February 20, 2012

Valentine's Day Week

We had a busy week of fun times!

First, Mr. Dew gave me this wonderful gift ( plus a necklace that is en route)

Than, we went to see Lady Antebellum with Nik and Mike on Wednesday night. As always, we had a great time together. Lady A was awesome!!

Than, we headed to the mountain and I skied for the first time in 7 years- OUCH is all I have to say about that. I took a nice fall on the first run but it came back to me after that. I had so much fun.

The best part is that Dad was with us all day..in the helmet that I was wearing and the shortened poles that Jack was skiing with. Pretty cool.

Syd came and met us for lunch and was the cutest snow bunny I've ever seen.


Sunday, February 12, 2012

Syd, you are 4 months old today. I continued to be amazed by you each day. You are "talking" all the time making the funniest little noises ranging from quiet coos to loud screams as you find your voice. Last weekend we heard your first true belly laugh. Up until now you've giggled, but this laugh is hilarious and you always leave me wanting more.

You've been drooling for the past month so we can only assume those teeth of yours are coming. You've had a few rough nights the last 2 weeks so we hope those teeth pop through quickly!

You are such a happy baby, easily giving away your smiles! You also started rice cereal last week and we've been adding in different fruits and veggies- so far you've had Peaches, Sweet Potatoes and Bananas- you love it all! You squeal when you see me getting your bowls out.

I love you Punky, more than you will know!







Wednesday, February 1, 2012

What every Dad should know about their Daughter

Saw this on FB (my main source of knowledge)from Faithpromise.org. I read this with Brian in mind, but it wasn't long before I realized that my Dad did all of these things for me. We will do the same for SJ.

Last week I was dropping my daughter off for a birthday party. As I was leaving a man stopped me asking for direction. He was standing with one of my daughter’s school friends. Immediately recognizing her I put my hand out and introduced myself explaining that our daughters sit together at lunch often. His reaction was sarcastic as he gave his daughter a side-ways glance. I didn’t fully catch what he said but whatever it was it didn’t honor his daughter in any way. Looking at her I could tell this was not abnormal behavior.

I’ll be honest… I wanted to punch him.

It’s challenging to articulate the influence a father has on a little girl. How much of his attitude and actions toward her can determine her future relationships. I remember how much stock I placed in what my dad thought of me. I remember how much I wanted him to be proud of me. To affirm me. To show me my value.

I remember how he would brag about me on the sidelines of the soccer field.

How he would tell me I’m beautiful.

How he would hug me so hard I couldn’t breath.

How often he reminded me as a teenager, “Never date a boy you wouldn’t marry.”
(What a way to narrow the playing field!)

Dad’s, don’t lose sight of the impact you have today on your daughter’s future. Here are three things I encourage you to focus on:

Affirm Her

She looks to you for affirmation, encouragement, & guidance. As she grows through puberty (ESPECIALLY, as she grows through puberty), she needs your voice reminding her that she is beautiful, valuable and worthy of love. If she can learn to believe you, then she’ll believe her future husband when he tells her the same things.

Set the Standard

Be the husband you want her to have one day. Enough said. Is it difficult? Yes. Does it mean sacrifice? Yes. Is it worth it? Yes. I watch my husband daily making changes to be a better husband and dad. He’s amazing. He demonstrates for our daughter the kind of man he wants her to marry one day.

Talk About the Standard

Talk about the future. As you “Imagine the End” and think about the man you hope she marries… talk about it! Let her know what you expect. Set the bar. She’ll do everything she can to jump over it.

Let me level with you, dad. The more you affirm her today, the less she’ll seek affirmation in some teenage boy later.