Babble

a magazine and community for the new urban parent

Strollerderby

Browse by Tags

(RSS)
  • 5 Reasons to Kill the Goody Bag

    As much as I love a good old fashioned kid’s birthday party with funny hats, silly games and, my favorite, cake, there is one thing I dread. The goody bag. When we’re handed these tokens of participation at the end of the soirée, I am filled with a mixture of angst and anxiety. I immediately start to try to scheme on how to get the colorfully decorated bag out of my daughters curious and greedy little hands. A task which I wish could be avoided altogether. Here are five reasons why the goody bag, at least the commercial prepackaged crap-ola bags, should be boycotted.

     

    Read More...


  • Greenhouse: Party Down, Green-Style

    Summer's over, but party season isn't. Tailgates, fall picnics, and before we know it, holiday entertaining are all upon us. Perhaps if you are a classy Martha Stewart type you use reusable, tasteful china for all your events, but for most of us whose "staff" consists of a few small people with a tendency to drop things, it's disposable partyware all the way. (not to mention that when we stocked up on basic Ikea wineglsses for our last party, guess who dropped and broke one in dramatic fashion first)?

    Of course, about the only thing that feels less green than tossing piles and piles of crap after a party is driving it to the dump in your SUV, so finding a way to lessen the waste is a great idea. Plum Party and Green Party Goods both have corn-based straws, cups and plastic silverware – I have actually used things of this type and they are awesome, completely undistinguishable from the regular petroleum-based stuff.

    Read More...


  • Des Moines sex club shut down

     

    Hardwood Cabin logo

    Most of the news that mentions Des Moines this week will be about will Shawn Johnson, the adorable little pixie person with abs of steel who is winning gymnastics medals in Beijing. But there's something else happening in Iowa's most populous city.

    Read More...


  • No presents for this kid - just donations

     No gifts please, just some canned goods

    More nice news – an 11-year-old in Greensboro, North Carolina told her friends not to bring presents to her birthday party. Instead, she asked them to bring canned goods that she will donate to a local food pantry.

    This isn't the first time Audrey Mangum decided to forgo gifts...

    Read More...


  • Parents Spent $3,000 On The Kid's First Birthday Party

    first birthdayA while ago the parenting story of the day was paring down parties for kids, and how these celebrations should be small and cost nothing and we should all forgo the party favors. There was even an online movement called Birthdays Without Pressure, for people who were kinda grossed out by the excesses of it all, and the word on the street was that big parties had more to do with competitive parents than the kids. At the time, I came out in defense of the lavish affair. However, I'm here to tell you I do have my limits, and they are definitely shy of this one-year-old's birthday. 

    How do you spend that much on a kid birthday? These parents did it by renting a room at a country club...

     

    Read More...


  • Fun Birthdays Despite Recession

    In all this talk about economic downturns and recessions or "recessions" and whatnot, politicians are overlooking one very important thing when calculating rebates and tax cuts and interest rates freezes and economic stimulation: what the hell is a parent to do about birthday parties?

    Listen, party-planning expert Lisa Kothari, author of Dear Peppers and Pollywogs...What Parents Want to Know About Planning Their Kids' Parties knows your pain and she wants to help out with her three-part series on recession-proof children's birthday parties. Thank God, because I was worried we'd have to leave it up to our kids this year to create their own fun.

     

    Read More...


  • Back-to-School Parties Are Really For Parents, Right?

    Back before I was a mother (ohhh, the Saturdays of having breakfast at 1 pm) and I was all judgy about mothers (wha-? me? I know, shocking) who complained about their kids being home all summer long, I thought they were crazy for wishing the academic year to arrive already and that they should just be grateful to be privileged to spend the best part of the year at home with the young ones.  Of course, this is the kind of naivete I reflect upon with lots of laughter and big old black Sharpie to X off another day until co-op finally starts again (31 days if you're keeping score at home).

    Read More...


  • My Kids Aren't Invited? Then I'm Not Coming to Your Party

     cocktail partyMy kids attend a Waldorf school that, like many Waldorf schools that struggle somewhat financially and strive to provide education that's within the reach of families in various financial circumstances, relies heavily on fundraising throughout the year to make ends meet. So the annual benefit auction is a big deal. The first few years we were with the school, the auctions were child-friendly: after all, the auction was, in essence, *for* the kids, in a way, as the money received went directly to the school and providing materials and eduction for them. My kids loved the magical atmosphere and flitted from room to room, sampling delicious food and reporting on important items that they wanted me to bid on in the hopes we would win them and take them home.  We all looked forward to the auction all year.

    Then the auction committee decided to make it an adult-only event and discouraged children from attending. It felt like some of the heart went out of the event for me then, and it became yet-another chi-chi occasion of the sort I avoided anyway, chock-full of people wearing clothes they normally wouldn't, laughing too loudly and generally not being themselves. Not having a babysitter handy, I stayed home that first year. The second year of adult-only I stayed home out of protest. It wasn't fun anymore, not for me.

    I guess this is a sensitive issue and it's being pondered over at The Wall Street Journal: while I'd never insist that my kids attend a gathering and would never knowingly taken them where they weren't wanted, I agree that if my kids aren't invited it's likely I'll stay home. I have taken them places where they were ostensibly and grudgingly welcomed, and none of us were comfortable. So why bother?

    Read More...


  • Blueprint Magazine Throws a Baby Shower Without Stupid Games

    My sister and I attended a baby shower a few years ago for a cousin. A cousin who was underage and having her first child. During this shower we were forced to play a game which involved us crawling around on all fours with vaseline on our noses picking up cotton balls. We were forced to do this while entirely sober. This was a crime against humanity, a crime Blueprint Magazine would like to put a halt to.

    This Modern Baby Shower thrown by Blueprint Magazine for two expecting employees, Kendra and Rachel, is the first step. I loved the whole look and knew I'd be stealing these ideas even though I have no expecting mothers to shower anytime soon. The simple look of the shower is excellent for couples, the asian inspired menu is easy to recreate using simple take out and purchased snacks plus the decor is simple. Like the Binth alphabet print given to each mother but also displayed as part of the party decor. Brilliant.

    I'm taking inspiration from the design for my sister's bridal shower next month, minus the Binth print and the great Mom-To-Be Gifts. However, I think this is the type of baby shower women are craving. No ducklings, pink, blue or even worse, games. Games. No, please, no more shower games.


  • Creepy Toy Division: Inflatable Trains and Dirty Monkeys

    Parents need to find fun (and healthy!) ways to entertain themselves at the endless array of neighborhood parties and birthday events and hosted kid-friendly BBQ's this Summer. What better way to get your giggle on then watching the kiddies jump in this "train"?

    Not good enough you say?  How about this fabulous monkey's "lap" playground equipment?

    With toys like these, Bratz dolls don't seem so terrible.

    [via Boing Boing] 


  • Birthday Party Excess (Again!)

    These stories of over-the-top kids' birthday parties are becoming so commonplace in the media now that I'm actually starting to think some of them sound like great ideas. Not the ones that cost tens of thousands of dollars where you have to book the Four Seasons ballroom six months in advance, but the kind discussed in this article, where you take your kids to a venue and let 'em go at it, whatever "it" happens to be.

    These parties are like Gymboree or Build-a-Bear parties taken to the next level, and it's a level that is somehow not as repulsive to me (I hate clowns and I hate stuffed animals). I could totally go for a dress-up party where my kids and their friends spend a couple hours tarting themselves up with sparkly eyeshadow and then dance around in fairy wings, especially if it didn't require me to provide the cold cream and mirror space. I can see having a build-your-own-pizza party, or a tea party in a fancy hotel.

    Well, I can almost see it. What I really like about what I'm reading here is that some of the parties were just really creative at-home parties, like a tractor-themed party with a real machine for climbing and pretending. Planned by professionals of course, which we have already established is kind of bizarre for a little kids' party, but there's no reason you couldn't come up with this stuff yourself. But then you're going to have to clean it up yourself when the fairy dust and tea-sandwich crumbs settle.


  • Daughter from Hell Trashes Mom's House with MySpace Party

    Seventeen-year-old Rachael Bell is staying with a friend for awhile. She can't bring herself to return home. I can see why. While her mom was away, she invited friends over for a party -- pretty typical teenage stuff. Who hasn't been to a kegger?

    But while Rachael says she invited only 40 people over, more than 200 people showed up. And they spent the next seven hours trashing the place. Condoms in the kid rooms. Cigarette burns on the clothes and carpeting. Fires. Vomit. You name it. The mom says the house has been "raped."

    So what happened? I can't even begin to sum up this party. Really, you have to go check it out. Each new twist is more bizzare than the last.

    Did she invite people? Did they just show up? Was her MySpace page hacked? Why did the cops bust it up only to leave again, allowing the party to continue? In the end, Rachael says she spent the duration of the party locked in the bathroom, while strangers spent seven hours tearing apart the family home. Whatever happened, I just want to know why she didn't call the cops herself. And why she didn't invite me.


  • Earth Day: Plan An "Earth Dinner"

    Here's an interesting way to observe Earth Day with your family, especially if your kids are preschool-aged or older: have an Earth Dinner. The program is designed by Organic Valley, a farmers' collective, as a way of incorporating a meal tradition into Earth Day in the manner of other established celebrations.

    It's kind of cool, actually. You can purchase a set of cards (profits go to the Organic Farm Friends Foundation) and use them as talking points to lead dinner conversation toward mindful eating, positive discussion about food and the earth, and personal memories. There are sample cards available for download, as well as recipe ideas to help plan a healthy organic dinner and a list of participatory restaurants for those who'd rather not cook. And specifically for kids, some fun links including Organic Valley's own kids' activity page.

    I'm not really much for theme dinners that don't involve tons of garlic, tomatoes, and the Godfather saga,  but I think I can get behind an organic lowcountry pilau with ham and bacon and going around the table to see who can name the most songs that reference food or eating, or hearing everyone's favorite food memory. It certainly beats our standard dinner conversation of poop, princesses, and politics.


  • April Fool's Day: Punk Your Kids

    april fools day dinnerApril Fool's Day is coming up, and if you haven't given it a thought, don't worry. With Strollerderby's help, you don't have to resort to the old "Kids, we're not your real parents" schtick.

    Here's a list of resources to ensure that on every prankster's favorite day, you have the last laugh.

    Kids' Turn Central—tons of links to April Fool's Day sites

    Family Fun—the best April Fool's Day meal ideas I've ever seen. (The photo is not chicken nuggets and mashed potatoes and gravy...)

    Kidzworld—Jokes, pranks, and gags.

    Kids' Party Fun—party ideas and more.

    Teachnet.com—Fun ideas for teachers that parents can do, too.

    Top 5 Children's Books about April Fools Day

    Have fun getting your kids punk'd!


     

     


  • Ringing in the New Year with Kids

    Recently Peter Hartlaub wrote a post on the Poop about how his New Year's Eve revelry days are over. I agree that with small children in the house, it's tougher to go out and party until well past midnight unless you book a sitter waaaaay in advance and pay a pretty penny for it. (By the way Peter, I never "feel guilty about leaving my kids with someone else while I get loaded.") But just because you have children, doesn't mean you can't celebrate New Year's Eve.

    A tradition for me and my West Coast friends to have a "New York New Year's party." We gather together around 6:00PM, everyone brings a dish to share and some champagne. If we really have our shit together we hire a sitter or two to keep an eye on the kids and we all chip in to pay for it. It's a great deal all around because the sitter makes some cash and still cuts out early enough to get his or her party on later.  We eat, we talk, we have a great time, and the kids have a great time "staying up late." At 9:00 pacific time, we tune into the east coast feed of New Year's Rockin' Eve and watch the ball drop. We toast, we kiss, then it's time to go home and put the kids to bed.

    Once the kids are asleep there is still time left in the evening for some adults-only celebrating. You can stay up and play a game or watch a movie together (or something), and at midnight (if you're still awake, that is), share a special bottle of bubbly with your partner.

    It's not impossible to party when you have kids. You just have to be a little more creative and a lot less spontaneous about it.

     



in

GROUP BLOGS

  • Strollerderby

    The smartest, funniest, most exhaustive parenting blog in the blogosphere.
  • Droolicious

    Modern design for modern parents.
  • FameCrawler

    Your daily baby celebrity fix.
back to blog homepage