Friday, May 5, 2017

Our sweet David!

I want to write a post for our precious little prince, our son David Refael.  I haven't been keeping a paper journal for him, but I will add this to his special mementos collection... below I will write about his baby months so far, what he is like as a baby, and what kind of impact he has had on our family.

David has brought so much love and affection into the world!  He is the apple of our eyes, the center of our family!  Everyone in our family adores him in an overflowing amount!  He has captured the hearts of many of his sisters' friends.  He has a few special friends from the bigger kids group- cousin Avi, Leon, and Tzipora.  They treat him with such love. He really looks like a combination of both his sisters, and sometimes I look at him and think I see my brother Joe's resemblance too.

Monday, May 1, 2017

The Secrets of Happy Families- Book review, by Bruce Feiler

Bruce Feiler scours the worlds of business, psychology, sports, the military, interior design, finances, and more to find the best practices that can be applied to families, too.  Everything he wrote about is backed up by recent research from multiple fields (which I am not citing.)  I highly recommend this book- it was entertaining to read (partly because written by a man!) and really full of helpful ideas.  Every so often I think it's good to refresh our ideas about family management, and not just go on autopilot.  It also reminds me to look back at my book review posts from the past few years and remember and put back into re-use the highlights!

Practices of agile families- based on successful business practices
Self directed morning check-list
why?
-kids find it comforting on groggy mornings to be able to go through the list of what they need to do
-parents can focus on the "softer side of parenting"
-teaches kids to be responsible and get the complete job done
-kids learn and enjoy the satisfaction of checking off the list
View our lists with words and clip art for non-readers on google drive (new window:)

Family meetings
-why?  because it's a built in mechanism for communication and reflection
-start with a drumroll or something else fun
-sitting on soft surfaces, in a circle formation, eating from same meal, and holding warm drinks are proven to make people act more kindly, cooperate like a team, and find their commonalities
-allows a time that kids know "tough subjects" may be brought up in a safe environment to discuss them.  i.e., not a crazy idea to sit down and talk to parents
-three questions to discuss
1) what things went well in our family this week?
2) what things could we improve in our family?
3) what things do we want to work on this week?

Miscellaneous:
-Go fast, but don't rush!
-to maximize sibling relationships and minimize conflict, have kids spend time beforehand engaged in a joint activity that reaffirms their connection
-most people have either a great family or a great career, and the other one is average.  The only way to have both be awesome is to apply the same level of passion and energy to your family as you do to your work.  Avoid that assymetry! (p.52.)
-synergize: build family unity while celebrating differences
-scientific studies show a persistent correlation between religiosity and happy families, and men with community religious participation as good, involved fathers and happy husbands.
-sitting at right angles is good for conversation,
-chores = "taking care of your awesome stuff"
-playing games together is a way to experience a common thing, when otherwise, kids and adults live in different kinds of mental worlds (online recs - Zynga, words with friends, cityville and farmville)
-try making an "Amazing Race" for a family vacation- creates teamwork
-"you're the kind of person who...(gets up and tries again.)" etc., from sports chapter, p.225. positive reinforcement builds self-esteem
-family boot camp- p.246. wow- forging a closer bond through crazy overnight missions!

Family dinners
-more about the family, less about the dinner (can be breakfast, or just a couple sacred times a week)
-kids knowing about their family history was the single best predictor of children's emotional health and happiness
-this makes a case for telling family history- stories and photo albums ;-) ;-) ;-) !!!
-the message is that a person with a strong "intergenerational self," who is connected to something bigger than themselves, is more resilient.  The family message is "we've had our ups and downs, but we've always stuck together and stuck it out."
-making really memorable family traditions strongly develops connectedness.
-lots of talking and listening.
-"hunger games:" playing word and talking games at the table.  word of the day (use it in a sentence), autobiographical story telling, alliteration, Q&A, etc.

Branding your family- family mission statements
-"the family brand is a clear, articulate vision of what we want our family to be and what values we want our children to uphold."  can be brief or detailed.
-80 words to help you describe your family identity (p. 66)
-create home environment where kids know exactly what is expected of them
-use a visualization exercise where a person narrates to themselves a description of their "best possible selves."  Research shows this is even more powerful than gratitude exercises.
-gives clarity and framework for dealing with life- because sometimes life comes at you in challenging, unexpected ways.

Five step process for fighting smart:
-isolate your emotions
-observe the bigger picture (go to the balcony)
-consider the other side's perspective
-don't reject, rather, reframe
-build them a golden bridge

teaching kids to manage money
-the chapter had lots of good options to consider from families who do give allowance, do not give allowance, pay for chores, do not pay for chores, encourage investment and savings through artificially high interest rates at the Bank of Mom and Dad, those who do not, etc.
-FamZoo is an awesome family money management website/app the author recommended
-most impact made when someone would have to give back a "gift" i.e.: you want Joey to make his bed.  You pay him $2 a week but if he doesn't make his bed he has to give it back.  That seems to be more powerful (based on studies) than rewarding him for making his bed, or delivering a negative consequence.
-money categories: mine, ours (family fun), share, save

Talking about tough stuff with kids
-if you talk about the little problems now, you can talk about the big problems later
-see chapter 7, the mom who made a huge, public, celebratory identity for herself as being the one all the kids could talk to about sex, coming of age, etc.
-impt. to name body parts because if you use a vague or incorrect term it implies there is something bad about it or can't be spoken of specifically
-talk to girls about getting their period earlier, not later!  it can help them be calm, proud, or excited instead of scared
-a "period party" is a special way to mark the time- give a care package, a fancy dinner, a shopping trip, something special like ear piercing, etc