Dear Brooklyn,
I know I have written you love letters before, but I have just one more thing to add. I really love that you have so darn many parks and playgrounds with fountains and sprinklers incorporated into them for those icky-sticky hot days like today. Ruby and I can walk out the door and into refreshing water play like this within two blocks in any direction.
Keep it cool, BK.
Love,
Annie
Monday, June 28, 2010
Sunday, June 27, 2010
love is what's important (random thoughts on gay parenting)
There was a recent study (with 25 years of research) that suggests that children with lesbian parents are well-adjusted and have fewer behavioral problems than their peers with heterosexual parents. My response to this is a resounding: DUH!
I'm not saying that there is anything inherently better about lesbian or gay parents than heterosexual parents. Good parents are good parents, no matter their sexual orientation. The thing is, to me it seems obvious that if you take a random sampling of the overall population of children with hetero parents and a random sampling of children with gay parents, you are going to have a much higher percentage of the latter in loving and nurturing homes (and being in a loving and nurturing home environment, in my humble opinion, is directly related to how socially and behaviorally well-adjusted a child is).
The unfortunate fact is, there are lots and lots of kids out there whose parents didn't mean to have them, whose parents weren't "together" when they got pregnant, and/or whose parents don't give the responsibility of parenting too much thought.
Lesbian or gay couples, however, don't have the luxury of ambivalence or the ability to take parenting for granted. You don't "accidentally" get pregnant if you are a lesbian. Rather, it takes people who are planning for a child so diligently that they have to really go out of their way to have one. If you try that hard to bring a child into your home, chances are you're going to continue to go out of your way to raise your child well and make good decisions and choices to help your child succeed.
Throughout college, I did a lot of babysitting to make extra money. I cared for tons of great kids, but the two who stick out in my mind as particularly amazing little people were a brother-and-sister pair whose two mommies were incredibly attentive, warm, and nurturing parents. These kids were startlingly smart (the little boy was two when I started caring for him and he would do addition, subtraction, and basic multiplication with the food on his plate at dinner) and sweet-sweet-sweet! The fact that their parents were lesbians was irrelevant; instead, what mattered was that they got all of the love and attention that they needed. Every day, their moms played games with them, sang songs with them, read books to them, talked with them, cuddled them, etc. If every child in this country was lucky enough to have parents just half as great as those two moms, imagine how much better off we would be!
Jude and I try our best to be good parents to Ruby by loving each other and loving her and showering her with attention and affection. This has nothing to do with the fact that we are heterosexual, but everything to do with how much we love our family and how badly we want to do right by our daughter. Love is what connects a family, not the constructions of the law.
I'm not saying that there is anything inherently better about lesbian or gay parents than heterosexual parents. Good parents are good parents, no matter their sexual orientation. The thing is, to me it seems obvious that if you take a random sampling of the overall population of children with hetero parents and a random sampling of children with gay parents, you are going to have a much higher percentage of the latter in loving and nurturing homes (and being in a loving and nurturing home environment, in my humble opinion, is directly related to how socially and behaviorally well-adjusted a child is).
The unfortunate fact is, there are lots and lots of kids out there whose parents didn't mean to have them, whose parents weren't "together" when they got pregnant, and/or whose parents don't give the responsibility of parenting too much thought.
Lesbian or gay couples, however, don't have the luxury of ambivalence or the ability to take parenting for granted. You don't "accidentally" get pregnant if you are a lesbian. Rather, it takes people who are planning for a child so diligently that they have to really go out of their way to have one. If you try that hard to bring a child into your home, chances are you're going to continue to go out of your way to raise your child well and make good decisions and choices to help your child succeed.
Throughout college, I did a lot of babysitting to make extra money. I cared for tons of great kids, but the two who stick out in my mind as particularly amazing little people were a brother-and-sister pair whose two mommies were incredibly attentive, warm, and nurturing parents. These kids were startlingly smart (the little boy was two when I started caring for him and he would do addition, subtraction, and basic multiplication with the food on his plate at dinner) and sweet-sweet-sweet! The fact that their parents were lesbians was irrelevant; instead, what mattered was that they got all of the love and attention that they needed. Every day, their moms played games with them, sang songs with them, read books to them, talked with them, cuddled them, etc. If every child in this country was lucky enough to have parents just half as great as those two moms, imagine how much better off we would be!
Jude and I try our best to be good parents to Ruby by loving each other and loving her and showering her with attention and affection. This has nothing to do with the fact that we are heterosexual, but everything to do with how much we love our family and how badly we want to do right by our daughter. Love is what connects a family, not the constructions of the law.
Saturday, June 26, 2010
lullabies for sleepy babes
Lullabies don't need to be children's songs. I repeat: lullabies don't need to be children's songs! I have created playlists and made CDs for friends having new babies for a couple of years now (check out myownlabels.com to make cute personalized CD labels for gifts) and Ruby is calmed by all sorts of soft songs that don't annoy me (which is important). Granted, anything that you play over and over again might get on your nerves (Jude is especially sensitive to this), so the key is to switch up your playlists from time to time while keeping a couple of favorites mixed in to keep baby's sleep association intact.
Here are some favorites of mine for lullabies:
Winter Song (with Ingrid Michaelson) by Sara Bareilles
Lullabye (Goodnight, My Angel) by Billy Joel
Down To The River To Pray by Alison Krauss
Didn't Leave Nobody But The Baby by Emmylou Harris
So Are You To Me by eastmountainsouth
Waiting On An Angel by Ben Harper
Lullaby by Jack Johnson
Love Me Tender by Elvis Presley
Naked As We Came by Iron and Wine
Birds And Ships (Featuring Natalie Merchant) by Billy Brag and Wilco
Falling Slowly by Glen Hansard & Marketa Irglova
I Will Follow You Into The Dark by Death Cab for Cutie
Lay Me Down by The Frames
Ballad for My One True Love by Mason Jennings
Here are some favorites of mine for lullabies:
Winter Song (with Ingrid Michaelson) by Sara Bareilles
Lullabye (Goodnight, My Angel) by Billy Joel
Down To The River To Pray by Alison Krauss
Didn't Leave Nobody But The Baby by Emmylou Harris
So Are You To Me by eastmountainsouth
Waiting On An Angel by Ben Harper
Lullaby by Jack Johnson
Love Me Tender by Elvis Presley
Naked As We Came by Iron and Wine
Birds And Ships (Featuring Natalie Merchant) by Billy Brag and Wilco
Falling Slowly by Glen Hansard & Marketa Irglova
I Will Follow You Into The Dark by Death Cab for Cutie
Lay Me Down by The Frames
Ballad for My One True Love by Mason Jennings
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