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  • Lock Away the Kids and Try the "Wall Kiss" ... If You Dare

    By now you've blackmailed an unsuspecting teenager into babysitting. You've made dinner reservations. Maybe you've bought some jewelry, some roses, a bottle of wine. You're ready to spend some quality time with your spouse while your kids get high on sugar and late-night TV. You're ready for Valentine's Day ... at least you thought so.

    Mom blogger Susie J. recounts the so many ways I don't know how to say I love you. "Behind the Veil" -- a kiss that involves a sandbox. The wall kiss, movie star kiss, the hot breath kiss, cherry kiss, mafia kiss. I need to start renting better porn or go back to middle school, because none of these are ringing any bells.

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  • Too Cold for a Jog? Run in Circles to Burn Off Parenting Steam

    What do you do when it's too cold outside to take a run, yet your treadmill is on the blink? Radioactive Girl has the answer. Head down to your basement, deposit your children on a trampoline mattress and run as fast as you can in circles. Some may simply call that parenthood, that feeling of running in endless circles -- but I call it awesome. After all, she did a 7-minute mile! In her basement.

    She says: "Running laps around the basement has an extra bonus. There are hurdles ...or remote control dinosaurs and a bunch of crap laying around, but they worked like hurdles. Although you feel a little like a mouse on a wheel running around and around, but going nowhere." Again, that sounds a lot like parenthood, but whatever.

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  • Low-tech Toys Inspire Creativity While Having Fun

    Having four children, if there's anything I know about, it's toys.  When my oldest daughter was born, I absolutely couldn't wait for her to get bigger.  Know why?  Legos.  I so wanted to play Legos, but being, you know, a "grown-up", I figured they were off-limits to me unless I had the handy excuse of playing with them with my kid. So when she got big enough, she got not only the Legos, but also Tinkertoys and Lincoln Logs.  And I was so happy.

    Turns out I'm not the only one who thinks low-tech toys are cool. The annual Oppenheim Toy Portfolio is chock-full of low-tech, open-ended, traditional toys like unit blocks, jumbo animals, and an easel.  There's an entire catalog, Back to Basics Toys, devoted to all your childhood favorites.  Other faves in our house have been a wooden train set, puzzles, board games, Breyer horses, stuffed animals, and wooden vehicles.

    On a budget?  Another extremely popular and much-used toy in my house has been a collection of colored silk cloths, which can be bought blank for next-to-nothing and easily dyed at home for a fun, creative, and eventually useful project, or they can be found in a rainbow of colors here and here.

    Really on a budget?   Our editor Jay Allen wrote an awesome piece awhile back at Blogging Baby, and his absolute #1 toy was (and I can attest to the popularity of these) an empty cardboard box.  You can turn that (free!  cheap!) box into a house, a vehicle, a puppet theater, a castle, you name it!  Or rather, your children will.  All you need is to wield the knife for them.

    Don't want the children underfoot all day?  Send them outside with a couple of old stumps they can roll around and a 2x4 or two, and a wagon.  Be sure there are some rocks and sticks out there too.  They'll know what to do with them. 



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