Archive for the ‘Natural Tips and Tricks’ Category

Chiropractic Care: The Vaccine Alternative?

fb Chiropractic Care: The Vaccine Alternative?

If you are a natural mommy, you might be avoiding vaccines, which is totally kosher with All Natural Mommies. Many of you have written us and asked what the best alternative to vaccines is…or asked if there even is an alternative and the long and short answer to this is YES.

Many chiropractors feel that the body works at it peak when it is alignment. They say that having your spine where it should be promotes circulation and immunity – natural immunity. So, with that said, we have been testing this theory for the last few years (our kids are nearly 3 and just over 1) and we have come to the conclusion that it just might be working. Neither of the boys have ever had antibiotics, snotty noses or caught the bugs that everyone else seems to get. They are healthy, happy and unvaccinated.

Here is a great article which discusses vaccines and chiropractors: http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/cgi/content/full/105/4/e43

You can get information on current illnesses and diseases here: www.cdc.gov

You can also get great information on communicable diseases here: http://www.health.state.ny.us/diseases/communicable/

Saturday Free Fun…

fb Saturday Free Fun...

Today is Saturday. It is a beautiful fall day and we don’t want to sit in the house, so the only option is to go outside. We would like to do something as a family today, but we are concious of the looming economy and our money at this point, so we are pondering things that are free or cheap. Of course, going to a mall isn’t fun, educational or cheap so we opt for something that will make a lifetime memory – like going to the pumpkin patch or a corn maze. Perhaps we will be able to find a free festival close by – i think the pumpkin festival is this week.

No matter what you decide to do – you can figure out something that is free or cheap without breaking the bank and without sitting on the couch all day. Get out and play with your kids in this fresh fall air and make a lifetime memory today!

Things you can do:

  1. Go to a fair or festival
  2. visit a pumpkin patch or corn maze
  3. make costumes or pick out items you can use to make costumes
  4. pick leaves and glue them to paper and then go through books to figure out the type of leaf and what kind of tree it is
  5. go to a park

What? What? What? What? What Mommy?

fb What? What? What? What? What Mommy?

For the past few months my toddler (will be three in Nov) has repeated himself over and over and over. Not all of the time of course, but just whenever it tickles his fancy. He repeatedly asks what, or says things that excite him over and over again – like when we take his uncle (a 15 year old) to harescramble races he repeatedly says I’m going to take Nate to a raaaccceeeee.” I discovered that I am not the only mom out there with this problem and located a fantastic article here: http://littlechildren.wordpress.com/2007/10/08/echolalia/

It appears that constant repeating has a term – echolalia. This article is definately a must read and not only gave me peace of mind, but also some things to look for and perhaps some things to consider before calling my pediatrician. Here are some snippets (thanks to the other blogger)

Here’s a brief list of ok reasons why toddlers repeat:

  • Sometimes it is the easiest thing to do, rather than think of novel things to say.
  • Sometimes they are just bored, stressed, afraid, or want to make conversation and don’t know how.
  • Sometimes they are just practicing things they know.
  • Sometimes they are not listening to your response; their mouth is on, but their ears aren’t
  • Sometimes they don’t understand your response, and so they ask again.
  • Sometimes they haven’t totally mastered a concept yet, even though it seems they have.
  • Sometimes what you said is pleasing to the ear, or pleasing to say.
  • Sometimes they are just mimicking you the way they would mimic other things you do.  Two-year olds especially learn by memorizing and mimicking.
  • Often times they haven’t learned the appropriate response. They need a storehouse of things to say before they can actually initiate something intelligent, and they need to hear you model first person speech so they can mimic. Don’t be afraid to put words in your toddler’s mouth when you suspect they don’t know what to say. Even if you’re wrong, they’ll soon be able to correct you or at least say, “No” which is good.
  • Sometimes they are thinking out loud. They repeat something over and over because they’re verbalizing their thoughts.  They may repeat until they make a decision, at which point they’ll say what that decision is, or answer their own question.
  • Sometimes they haven’t mastered pronoun reversal yet, so it sounds like they are echoing you but are really asking reflexively. (i.e. they mean “What do I want?” instead of “What do you want?”) At some point, they will learn to change pronouns and you see they are simply thinking aloud, or asking themselves. I prompted my toddlers by saying, “I want…” and letting them fill in the blank.
  • Many times the reactions they get when they say things make it rewarding to keep repeating, even if they don’t need to. (i.e. most toddlers crave the great attention they get when they yell, “NO!” or when they ask academic questions, like “What letter is this?” and the busy parent suddenly takes interest to answer.)