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What’s happening around the community

March 4, 2011 in Around the Site, Featured by Admin Dawn

Remember tomorrow is our first ever In Real Life event but it won’t be our last! Our goal is to give you opportunities to build your support network on AND off-site. We are working on more events for laster this year so stay tuned!

March & April Book Club Book

We’re very proud to announce that we’ve chosen site member Suzanne Kamata‘s anthology Love You to Pieces: Creative Writers on Raising a Child with Special Needs.

The first collection of literary writing on raising a child with special needs, Love You to Pieces features caregivers’ perspectives at every stage in the lives of children with mental or physical difficulties, from premature birth to middle age. In this rich blend of short stories, essays, and poems, families cope with autism, deafness, muscular dystrophy, Down syndrome, other forms of retardation, and more, laying bare the moments of rage, disappointment, and guilt that can color their relationships. Parent-child communication can be a challenge at the best of times,b ut here we see the epic struggles and triumphs of those who speak their own language – or don’t speak at all – and those who love them dearly. Together, the authors paint a beautiful, wrenchingly honest portrait of what it means to care for a child who does not experience the world as we do.

We hope you will join us!

Welcome to our New Members

Aubrey L.: “I have a support group for others affected by premature birth (I was born three months premature) called www.precious-miracles.org as well as special needs (I work as a Care Aide within a school district). I want my website to be a place of support, encouraging words, a listening ear, a shoulder to lean on. Please visit my site to find out all the interesting offerings it has!”

Danielle: “I work in special education and am the proud mother of a child with special needs!”

Heather: “My daughter is 5 1/2 years old, and was diagnosed with CP around 10 months. It has been a long road and just intersted in meeting others with simillar life stories.”

Beth: “I am the very happy mom and 2 boys! Matthew is two and perfectly happy, healthy! Grant is going to be 1 in March and he is perfectly happy and for the most part healthy besides his CP he has! He is doing great and accomplishing so much! These boys bring so much joy to my life!”

Pat Boyle England: “Advocating for kids” and who blogs at septanorthbellmore.blogspot.com

Chaney who blogs at Here’s My Voice

Ann Rounseville: “I am currently a stay at home mom of an adorable 3.5 year old little boy who is diagnosed with PDD-NOS, Global Developmental Delay and Hypotonia. He is non-verbal but has the best belly laugh in the world! I am also expecting a baby in May. Life with our little guy has not been easy and I find meeting other parents of kids with special needs to be so very helpful and important!”

Jaymi Griesmeyer: “I am the mother of three amazing children. My oldest is 7, he is gifted and has generalized anxiety disorder. My second son is 6 and was born with a congenital heart defect and had open heart surgery when he was 5 days old. My youngest is a 3 year old girl who has epilepsy and developmental delays.”

Ginger Adams

Tisha Libbey: “i have a 5 yr old daughter with CP. she is legally blind, has a VP shunt and a G tube for all meals”

Kristy Allen: “Mom of son with developmental delay.”

Jenny: “I have mild Autism. I may even be Aspergers but I dunno. I have a little brother with sever Autism. I’m also a Christian. I’m a greatful believer and follower of Jesus Christ.” Jenny blogs at The World of Mismatched Socks

Deanne Webber: “I am the mom of 2 incredible children”

Have you added your blog yet?

There are lots of ways to help us discover your blog or website:

• You can add your blog feed to our site. Every time you update, we will pull in an excerpt and post it to our Blogging Our Lives Group. It will also show up in our activity feed that updates here and on our front page.

• You can add your blog address to your signature file on your profile.

• Next time you write a great blog post let us all know about it by sharing it as Community News. It will update to the Community News page and go out on our Twitter stream.

 

A special screening in Atlanta

September 30, 2010 in In Real Life by Admin Dawn

Seven months ago when Julia and I first started talking about building this site we had big plans and most of those plans have come to fruition. We’ve watched you all make connections on the special needs parenting support groups — getting advice, encouragement and even a new recipe for dinner. We’ve watched you pull together as a community — checking out the live chat, joining the book club and adding to the news page. It’s been amazing! But we knew when we started this that we wanted more. We wanted to give you opportunities to have fun in your real lives. That’s why we’ve organized the giveaways and that’s why we’ve put this together:

We are proud to present the Atlanta premiere of the award-winning documentary, MONICA & DAVID, in partnership with HBO and AMC Phipps Plaza in Atlanta, GA. Look at this trailer, doesn’t it look amazing?

The film premieres on HBO on October 14th but we have arranged a special FREE screening for the Support for Special Needs community on Monday, October 11th at 7pm at AMC Phipps Plaza, home to the Sensory Friendly Film Series.

You can reserve your seats to the show by clicking to our sign up page here.

We’ll be featuring an interview with the filmmaker, Alexandra Codina, next week!

It makes sense that Atlanta would be our first in-person event — after all Julia lives there and parenting two kids with special needs means she’s been an active member of that community since her kids were diagnosed. But we plan to come to YOU, too.

If you want us to put your town on our list for any upcoming events you can help by inviting your in-person friends to join our site. If we know that you can help us rally an audience, we will work hard to give you a reason to do it! We’re already planning for next year but first we want to enjoy this inaugural event. If you’re in Atlanta — or close enough to drive in — please join us! Julia would love to shake your hand in person! (Now me, I live in Ohio so I still haven’t been able to shake Julia’s hand in person because we’ve never actually met! Oh the magic of the internet!)

Struggling with feeding

September 2, 2010 in Ask the Feeding Specialist, Insider Insight by Katja Rowell MD

CookingAs a behavioral childhood feeding specialist, I work with lots of families struggling with feeding. From picky eating to weight and nutrition concerns, parents are working hard, frustrated and scared. While I have worked mostly with typically developing children, Ellyn Satter’s Division of Responsibility in feeding is appropriate for almost all children, including those with special needs, from Type I Diabetes, to autism. Families with children who are extremely selective have called in despair- months of therapy and the problems seem to be getting worse. I’ve had families say they “tried” family meals for a few weeks and they “didn’t work.” I am pleased that Satter’s latest newsletter specifically addresses children with ASD and SI issues and look forward to more of her work addressing the concerns of special needs families.
Check out her latest newsletter and then comment here or come by the Feeding our Families support group to share what you think!

From: July 2010 • Family Meals Focus #47 • Pressured on All Sides

The Feeding with Love and Good Sense Video and Teacher’s Guide, published in 1987, is being revised! The Childhood Feeding Collaborative of the Santa Clara County Public Health Department in San Jose, CA funded the videography and recruited parent volunteers. I produced 30 hours of footage with as many families and am well on my way to turning the footage into about an 80-minute video that addresses feeding the (infant, transition, toddler, preschooler). I have lots of plans for making further use of this footage, but enough of that. Let’s talk about what I saw.

To put a positive spin on it, parents work way too hard! To put a not-so-positive spin on it, parents are interfering. They sit down to a lovely meal and spoil it right away by telling the child, “you know the rules-you have to eat your vegetables.” Often the “eat your vegetables” admonition reverberates, with one parent picking up the words of the other and the first amplifying the second and back again. Parents peer and arrange and wipe-wipe-wipe and scrape together the child’s food. They tap the child’s plate and interrupt her conversation to remind her to finish whatever-it-is. They insist on one bite of everything and reason and praise and feed children who are old enough to feed themselves and explain about nutritional superiority and make bargains about “first this and then that.” They keep up a rat-tat litany: Use your fork, use your spoon, use your napkin. For their part, children do not easily give up their rights with eating. They argue, whine, cry, resist and evade, become defiantly messy, throw anything within reach, and press their parents to make increasingly ridiculous food bargains.

As a result of all this static, children are so stressed that they lose touch with themselves: their internal cues of hunger and satiety, their enjoyment and curiosity about food, and their pride in learning to do well with eating. But parents are stressed as well. They do not enjoy making their child miserable, but they do it anyway because they think it is good parenting with food. Why all the fuss? If children get the support they need – enjoyable family meals – they push themselves along to learn to eat the food their parents eat. Eventually they even do it neatly. Where do parents get the idea that they have to micromanage children’s eating? This pattern is not confined to San Jose, CA, nor is it new. Thirty years ago, an experienced Pediatric Nurse Practitioner observed to me, “If a child eats, parents think it is all their idea.”

Given this pressure on their eating, little wonder that children who are at all cautious and limited in with respect to eating develop extreme food selectivity or bizarre food behaviors. If fed according to a division of responsibility and allowed to move along according to their own tempo, slow-to-warm-up children learn to enjoy a variety of food. Really cautious kids, such as those with sensory integration disorders and autism spectrum disorders, still push themselves ever-so-slowly along to learn to eat. To do that they need structure, opportunities to learn and no pressure. Children with neuromuscular limitations struggle to manage the nipple or the spoon and eat until they run out of energy and it stops being enjoyable. Then they need nutritional support delivered in some other way so they and they and their parents don’t have to wear themselves out satisfying their nutritional requirements.

The take-home message is that we have work to do. We must let these poor parents – and these poor children – off the hook by teaching parents the division of responsibility in feeding. Along with that, we must help parents identify when they are putting pressure on feeding, and give them the good news about how much happier they and they child will be if they stop it.

Copyright © 2010 by Ellyn Satter. Published at www.EllynSatter.com.

Andrea McDowell: Ignorance

August 12, 2010 in Inspiration by Admin Dawn

Can you tell me a little bit about yourself and your family?

My family is about as small as a family can be right now: myself and Frances. Her father and I separated about three and a half years ago, so we are right now a family of two. Frances’s family, of course, is larger.

Frances remains the same sweet, affectionate, giggly, energetic, clever little bunny she was when I first nicknamed her the World’s Best Baby Ever, Bar None–only now she’s six and a half, reading chapter books, memorizing facts about dinosaurs and in all respects acting like someone who intends to actually grow up. This still stuns me, somehow. Frances has now heard often enough about this that she sometimes asks me if it seems like I just brought her home from the hospital last week.

As for me: I work full time coordinating environmental assessments for wind farms, part time writing mostly short environmental pieces, volunteer for a couple of environmental groups–you may notice a theme here–do a lot of nature walks, read obsessively, take pictures, run, sew, bake, and of course take care of Frances. I ask myself, why burn the candle at both ends when you can break it in half and burn all four? While juggling them, even. Why not?

How did you find out about the My Baby Rides the Short Bus anthology?

Initially I saw a post on Literary Mama‘s blog about the anthology, and I was mulling over what to submit when one of the editors–unfortunately I can’t remember which one but I think it might have been Jennifer–contacted me and asked me to contribute. I was thrilled to, of course. It’s my first book credit. :)

How did you choose to submit “The Story So Far?”

I didn’t. I’d actually written an entirely different contribution, about a death threat I’d received because my daughter is short. They asked me to rework and submit “The Story So Far” instead. Death threats have more dramatic potential but I suppose less of the everyday flavour they were looking for.

When I think back and try to remember the inspiration for “The Story So Far” for the blog, I believe it was because of the number of Google searches coming through obviously from pregnant women freaking out over a potential dwarfism diagnosis. “Fetal ultrasound short femur” or “short femur 32 weeks” or “achondroplasia ultrasound” or whatever. And people would leave comments or send emails — dwarfism is not like Down syndrome, or asperger’s, or autism. All forms of dwarfism together have a 1/10,000 rate for live births, and each particular type of dwarfism is considerably more rare than that. Right now, there isn’t a thriving online community of dwarfism or parent-of-dwarf blogs. There are a couple of memoirs, a couple of websites for in-person support groups, a bunch of medical information, and that’s it. Given that it wasn’t that long ago that a parent of a newborn dwarf might be told of their child’s promising career in the circus, that might not be so surprising.

When I was told that Frances would have a “mild form of dwarfism,” when I was seven months pregnant, I was terrified. (“But don’t worry,” said the doctor, “we’re pretty sure it’s not fatal.”) Completely terrified. Every new (mis)diagnosis terrified me again. When I got to that place on the other side of the terror, I felt a responsibility to telegraph it back to those pregnant women googling their eyes out after that first terrifying ultrasound: it’s coming, you’ll be ok, your child will be ok, better than ok. God knows, barring the medical merry-go-round in the first year of Frances’s life, she is a great kid. She makes being a mom very, very easy. As far as I’m concerned, I won the lottery.

From Andrea’s nature blog: Zoopolis: Ignorance

What are we learning? I don’t know. Something. But it’s fun.

I know nothing about nature.

An odd thing for an eco-geek and professional environmentalist to confess, I grant you, but it’s true. I know nothing about nature. Oh sure, I have an undergrad degree in Environmental Studies complete with courses on ecology, biology, complex systems, remediation, and the history of environmental thought. And yes, I do have a bookshelf full of field guides, albums and hard disks crammed with nature photos, pictures on the walls, and a deep and abiding love and appreciation for the life cycle of the trout lily and the trillium. But that’s just it. Once you’ve learned that much, you know that you could spend the rest of your life doing nothing but learning about non-human nature, and at the end of your alloted threescore-and-ten, you would still know so very little that it would amount to nothing at all. Nothing of any significance. A mere fingernail scratch on the surface of our vast and collective ignorance.

I think it’s a cheat, personally, and am very bitter that I only get that threescore-and-ten to figure it all out. If it’s going to take me a millenium, then dammit, why don’t I get one? Anyway, that’s not the point. The point is, I know nothing about nature.

Which makes you wonder–and well you might, since it makes me wonder–what special form of hubris I must suffer under to think that I am qualified to teach Frances anything whatsoever about nature?

Good question. Umm … I don’t know.

Biologists used to think that there might be as many as three million different species on the planet, until an enterprising entomologist (Terry Irwin from the National Museum of Natural History) went and fumigated a single tree of a single species in the Panamanian rainforest. Just one. Underneath it, before the fumigation, he’d placed several overlapping metre-wide funnels, so that anything that fell out of the tree could be collected and classified. And from just this one tree–just one!–he found 1200 species of beetles, 163 of them specific to this one species of tree. Extrapolating from this study, Erwin estimated that there may be 30,000,000 species of arthropods in the world, let alone mammals and worms and birds and all the rest. It was a controversial estimate, but even naysayers now assume that there are at least 2.5 million and possibly over 10 million species of arthropods. Arthropods!  And here I am, teaching Frances about pine trees. Biologists now estimate that the earth may host as many as 100,000,000 species, and likely between five and twenty million. Of which we have classified 1.5 million (and many of those assumed to be duplicates).

That’s a lot. By the time we catalogue them all so many more will have evolved that we’d be starting from scratch again. As a species, collectively, we’ll never know anything more than the most basic information about nature. This doesn’t stop us from obliterating 100 species every day … but that’s another post.

I don’t know anything about non-human nature. YOU, dear reader, know nothing about non-human nature. Our most emminent biological experts know NOTHING about non-human nature. This is an insoluble ignorance. We might as well get comfortable with it.

So who do I think I am, taking Frances outside to teach her about nature?

Well. I do teach her a couple things, like acorns turn into oak trees, chipmunks are fiercer than squirrels, maple syrup comes from maple trees but not the kind growing out back, chickadees stay here all winter, that trillium is at least seven years old, this Queen Anne’s Lace is actually a wild carrot and not native to Southern Ontario, and other unrelated bits of trivia that I’ve collected over the years. It all adds up to … nothing, probably. Not even as much as she’d need to pass a highschool ecology test.

She’s not learning about math outside, when she’s with me, though we often count things we see. She’s not learning about art or aesthetics, though we often comment on the beauty of what we find. She’s not learning about biology in any practical way when I teach her about tadpoles and frogs, and she’s too young to be terrified of the natural world so I don’t tell her about the endocrine disruptors we’ve dumped so much of into the environment that many frogs are going extinct because they can no longer reproduce. Maybe she’ll pick up enough to be useful to her in her future academic or professional careers, and maybe not.

I don’t care.

So long as she learns to love it.

She won’t love it in the same way or for the same reasons I do. That’s ok. There are at least 5,000,000 good reasons to love the world (though falling fast); we don’t need to share them.

It’s so easy with kids. They have a natural affinity for animals and growing things. All you need to do is give them an opportunity and get out of the way. Just don’t tell them it’s gross or dirty or going to give them the plague.

But in another way, it’s so much harder than memorizing and reciting cool facts. I am teaching my daughter to love a dying world.

No one ever fought to save something they didn’t love first. She won’t fight to save our world–neither will you, neither will your kids–if she doesn’t love it first. So I’ll take her outside to teach her to love it, and let her figure out the rest for herself.

There are compensations.

Wood Song

Sarah Teasdale

I heard a wood thrush in the dusk
Twirl three notes and make a star.
My heart that walked with bitterness
Came back from very far.

Three shining notes were all he had,
And yet they made a starry call–
I caught life back against my breast
And kissed it, scars and all.

What if a bird’s song could do that for you, or your child?

The world is a big, beautiful place, even broken and hobbled as it is, filled with amazing and gorgeous things, most of which have nothing to do with us. One thousand two hundred species of beetle in a single tree in the Panamanian rainforest. And we think our cities are diverse.

It’s not hard to love it, and love’s not hard to teach. Kids can fall in love with a mud puddle, if you let them get dirty. Just take them outside and get out of their way, and everything else will fall into place.

You can buy a copy of My Baby Rides the Short Bus by clicking the link!

Avatar of Karen

by Karen

Single Moms — Web Outcasts

July 22, 2010 in Loved Ones by Karen

I’m frustrated by the lack of voice that single parents still have in online content. I half-jokingly remarked to a friend (also a web geek and also a single mom) that we single parents seem like web outcasts. We live outside of the “normal” communities. We have our own little enclaves of content, but we are not part of most of the large communities.

It’s not as if we aren’t out there – and contributing some great content: Single Mom Seeking, Dad’s House, Single Mom Says (check out the Singlemommyhood.com list for more).

So why hasn’t our voice been heard? Why are we regarded as an invisible minority?

I think it’s due to a few factors. One of them is misconceptions about single parents – who they are, what they are, and how many there are:

  • only 24% of all households (US) are a married couple with children
  • 45.8% of (US) marriages end in divorce
  • single mothers are not just teenage mothers:
    • teenage mothers are only 11% of births (US)
    • almost half of all single mothers (US) are divorced single moms (3.392 million)
    • 33% percent of single parents have never been married
  • 11.2% of ALL (US) households are currently single parent households
    • 27.7% of households with children are single parent households
  • almost 30% of all US parenting content goes to single parent households
  • 37% of (Canadian) marriages end in divorce
  • 31% of all family households* (Canada) are not married:
    • 15.5% of family households (Canada) are common law families
    • 15.9% of family households (Canada) are single parents:
      • 12.8% are single moms & 1.3% are single dads
  • 31% of all Canadian parenting content goes to single parent households

In short: ONE THIRD of the US/Canadian parenting content consumers are single parent households.

Also worthy of note: Canada has a much higher single parenting rate than the US – in part because common law households and married same sex couples are more common (and legal) here in Canada.

Canadian crime rates are lower than US crime rates - and we have more single parent households (per capita) than the US.

This means that based on population numbers – every “parenting” panel, every “mommy” group of contributors and group of “parenting” content award winners should have more single parents. For every 10 married mom bloggers out there there we should also see at least three single mom bloggers and at least one single dad blogger as well.

Popular single mom bloggers and single mom community leaders are often regarded as “unusual” – while single dad bloggers and community leaders are as rare as hen’s teeth. The online market is saturated with married blogging moms. Unfortunately many content providers and marketers view married blogging moms as representative all parenting issues and priorities.

Nothing could be further from the truth.

What’s even worse is when a commercial community desperately attempts to market to the single parent demographic and they do a horrendous job of it. Like when Momversation deliberately chose to ask their panel members to represent an issue they don’t even have; being “a stressed working mom” or when they tried to bring in a single mom audience with the inflammatory and prejudicial question “can married moms and single moms be friends?”. Or how Blogher chooses to not have ANY single parent content or an editor for single parent content.

Imagine if someone tried to speak “for” another race or speak “for” another gender? Speaking “for” a group implies they can’t speak for themselves, that they don’t have a voice, are incapable of understanding their own issues, or that some other voice has more “authority”.

I can’t list how many times I’ve heard married moms compare themselves to single moms (or working moms) and outright stating what single (or working) mom issues must be because they think so.

They don’t ask what our issues are – they tell us.

One third of the market continues to be under-represented or to have our view presented “for” us – and the massive single parent audience is left with web content that is largely irrelevant, unappealing, useless, misleading, inaccurate and sometimes even insulting.

Why would commercial web communities exclude single parents? Is it a deliberate choice or an unconscious choice? Single parents recognize that we’re being excluded (unconsciously or otherwise) and we want to change it.

So we need to know why – and change what online communities know about single parents:

  • publishers of online content are genuinely unaware of how large the single parent audience really is – and that the single parent demographic is growing much faster than the married parent demographic (we are one third of the market and growing – fast!)
  • leisure time, lack of appeal or inclusion:
    • working and parenting alone leaves single parents with much less leisure time than other parenting families for publishing content and participating in online communities
    • single parents publish much less quantity content – but often publish higher quality content. Quantity of online publishers should be minimized and quality should be emphasized.
    • do not speak for us - invite us to speak instead
  • the image of the single parent – false perception that single parents are poor, uneducated, unemployed and inactive on line
  • broken homes nonsense: the mistaken belief that single parent households are a sad and broken – a real “downer” for their audience. Single parents are often empowered and positive images out there – LOTS of us have IMPROVED our situations by becoming single parents, including higher income levels
  • our discretionary spending power – the mistaken belief that single parents are raising only one child and that we do not have discretionary spending budgets. We often have entire households we maintain, more than one child – and the budgets to go with it.
  • age range – single parents are NOT only (or even mostly) teen mothers
  • fear of single parents as a negative “moral” influence – when many single parents are single parents because of their moral choices or beliefs

What do you think?
* Stats Canada counts households differently than the U.S. Census Bureau
Sources: U.S. Census Bureau, National Center for Health Statistics, Stats Canada

(This piece originally appeared in longer form at Momartfully, Karen‘s personal blog. We felt her points were so important that we wanted to share them here and publicly express our commitment to serving our members who are single parents. Karen is also the owner of our Single, Divorced and Widowed Parent Support Group.)

Meet Siobhan, generous and creative

July 16, 2010 in Featured Group, Featured Member by Admin Dawn

I first met Siobhan because she volunteers to help run IFIF — Interracial Families in Friendship. A local Columbus Ohio support group for interracial families. Siobhan is the “list mom” for the email list. She manages it by making sure people stay on topic and gently guiding people to the discussion list when they forget and start chatting on the list for announcements only. I was impressed with her before I even met her in person because I know that it takes special care to keep any email list drama-free and she does a terrific job of it.

She has been a stalwart supporter of Support for Special Needs and is one of our founding members. She is also a Creative Memories consultant and for fun week, we talked about the scrapbooking group she created on the site and why having that outlet is important to her.

Can you talk a little bit about how you got into scrapbooking in general? And digital scrapbooking in particular? (Did you do the hard copy kind ever?)

I have always been a photographer, always kept photo albums. And I was very resistant to the idea of scrapbooking. My preconceived notions were of fancy, frilly time-consuming pages. I am not at all into crafty things, frankly because I am simply not crafty.

In 2000, my oldest daughter in her first year. A friend of mine became a Creative Memories consultant and invited me to an open house. I turned her down. I was not interested. She was very insistent, so I finally caved. I would go but I was not going to be involved in scrapbooking.

What I found at the open house, however, was information about photo preservation, and that interested me very much, I learned how my current photo albums were damaging my photos. I wanted that to stop. However, it wasn’t even preserving my photos that truly sold me on “scrapbooking” and Creative Memories in particular.
In addition to always having been a photographer, I have always been a writer. Even as a teenager, I wrote captions on slips of paper and stuck them alongside my pictures in pocket albums. There was no way I could resist Creative Memories’ passion for preserving the stories with the photos. I left that open house with a small album, a kit for completing the pages in it, and a pen. That was the beginning of my making albums for my family for life.

When my friend moved out of town, I signed on as a consultant so that I could continue to work on my albums with my friends. For the first years of my business, I ran monthly crops in my home, taught classes, and worked diligently on my own albums to the point where I had all my photos in albums and added them as I took them. Being able to tell the stories as they were happening, capturing the emotions and details that the pictures alone couldn’t tell, brought me and my growing family much joy.

With much trepidation, I started shooting digital photography in 2002. I was diligent about sorting and printing all my digital images and continued making traditional albums. When Creative Memories introduced digital photo storage/organization software, and later digital scrapbooking software, I was thrilled. Being able to organize and easily work with my images right on my computer brought a new level of easy and simplicity to my work. As more and more people started working with digital images, it was natural to begin to teach the digital side of scrapbooking as well.

Today, I primarily make digital albums that I have printed and shipped to me by Creative Memories Photo Center. I have shelves full of completed traditional albums and digital albums all mixed in together. One of the reasons I am so thrilled with digital albums is that all my “mess” – my papers, embellishments, photos, and tools are contained within the body of my laptop. I can take them literally anywhere and work on them. And when I have a completed album, I can make as many copies as I like with no additional work. I do now, and always have, given albums as gifts.

I still have some catch-up work to do with my girls school albums – traditional albums in which I am capturing samples of their school work, along with class photos and other school related memoriabilia. So, I do still work in traditional albums as well. Other traditional albums that I continue to keep are filled with portraits of the girls, one for each of them.

And then can you talk a little bit about Creative Memories and why you chose to work with them?

Creative Memories is a direct-sales company that uses a home party plan for marketing products. I chose to work with them because they put a lot of time and money into scientific research to ensure that the products that we sell are photo safe and long lasting. Creative Memories also made my job and my album making simple. With a philosophy of “simple pages, completed albums,” I was not intimidated by the idea of scrapbooking any more. Simple creative tools and products, and lots and lots of idea books, allowed me to learn to make quick and beautiful album pages that emphasize my photos and my family’s stories.

As a very busy single mom of two very busy girls, what does scrapbooking give you?

As a mom, scrapbooking has given me so many things. When my girls were babies and toddlers, it gave me a grown-up thing to do and social time that I very much needed. It also gave me a way to document my children’s milestones as well as my own memories – thoughts and feelings that, believe it or not, I would forget as time went on no matter how impactful a given moment in time was at the instant.

Having my own Creative Memories business also allowed me to be a stay at home mom while making some additional money for our family. When my husband passed away in 2008, I had all those years of family albums with pictures and thoughts and feelings of and from their father. These are a comfort to my children in a way that nothing else could ever be.

The other thing that scrapbooking gives me is a creative outlet. When my girls were small, I was tired all the time. I wasn’t able to read or write as much as I was used to doing. But I am an artist, and I was always toting my camera around. Scrapbooking made me look more closely at my photography; it made it better. It also made me more aware of moments to capture, so I took pictures that I might have otherwise not considered. When the images are printed, or sorted digtially, creating an album gives me time to enjoy my children in a deeper way, and it reminds me – even in the most challenging of times – of the love and joy that my family brings.

How do you find the time to keep up on it?

Today, with both kids in school and my time crunched as we all feel, I find that working digitally is the biggest benefit to my being able to keep up with my albums. While I never thought I would be, I am connected electronically, and my laptop is never far from my reach. Because of the time I spent making traditional albums, I know which albums I now want to create. I make a yearly album for each of the girls with photos from their school field trips and activities. Because I know I am going to make that album, I can start the project in the fall and continue dropping the images in as they come along. By the time the school year is out, I have a completed album.

Another time saver that I use is making themed albums. Vacations, in particular, make a good stand alone album. Between the school albums and vacations, I capture the majority of our lives.

I work on my albums in the moments I have. It helps a great deal not having to get out papers and other supplies and set them up, but I also have a table in the basement dedicated to traditional albums. I keep the current project there and work on a page or two as I can. I work on my digital albums mostly in the evenings after the girls have gone to bed and while I watch tv. It is relaxing and helps me to unwind from a long, busy day. (I just have to watch it because once I get started working with the images, I can stay up far later than I probably should!)

I also take time on occasion to get together with friends at their homes and work on albums. I am not able to do this as regularly as I was, but when I can make it work, it is a joy.

Like anything, making the time, and taking the time, to work on albums takes some self-discipline. It might be easier to sit and mindlessly play games of Bejeweled Blitz or click through friends’ photo albums on Facebook. I have learned, however, that capturing the memories and feelings when they are fresh is not only far easier for me but also far more rewarding in the end product. I want my children to have those memories preserved for them, and I want that for myself as well. I get a great deal of satisfaction when I’ve completed an album and can share it.

What do you hope people get out of the scrapbooking group?

I hope that people will get courage out of the sscrapbooking group. If they need it and want it, I hope they will get tips that will help them. I hope that the camaraderie will bolster each one of us as we move through our lives, with good times and difficult, and preserve the images and memories for those we love. And I hope we have a whole lot of fun!

By the way, Siobhan has a coupon code to share on www.cmphotocenter.com – Use her CM ID 41373165 for 20 FREE prints!

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