My blog has moved!

You should be automatically redirected in 5 seconds. If not, visit
http://thegirlrevolution.com
and update your bookmarks.

Showing posts with label blogfabulous. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blogfabulous. Show all posts

Friday, January 18, 2008

Allomothering


I love the concept of allomothering, especially for daughters.

Allomothering is non-maternal infant care.

It usually refers to fathers, aunts, grandmothers or siblings of an animal caring for and nurturing it while mommy takes a break or goes out foraging.

While you'll never hear me say anyone can take the place of Mommy, there are benefits of providing as much exposure to other family members, friends, and caretakers and babysitters as possible. There are obvious benefits of allowing a child to be surround by many people who love them.

There are also benefits for girls to see how other women live and think. Women have been in dramatic transition in the last 30 years and different women have reacted in various ways.

Exposure to the different choices women make can only benefit daughters. There is no right or single way to be a woman - more choices for daughters is what I'm after.

If girls only see the one way their own mother's live out their chosen roles we rob them of exposure to all the other choices.

I believe there are also generational hangups that will take more than a single generation of women to iron out or correct. I'm hoping that Ainsley won't have such terrible guilt about working outside the home if that's where her dreams take her. I don't necessarily want her to work fulltime at an office, but any terrible guilt is is an undue burden I don't want to put on her.

Ainsley is quite lucky in that she has many women who are more than willing to allomother her. She has two sets of grandparents, aunts, uncles and cousins, family friends, even three sets of great-grandparents.

My parents are coming to stay with the kids while I jaunt off with my man on a business trip to Atlanta for 5 whole days. I love that my parents are willing to do this and I love that Ainsley will have the attention, love, affection and interaction of others.

Exposure to a different way of doing things is healthy for girls to experience.

Friday, January 11, 2008

Don't Be A Girl


Get your shoes on Zack, come to Home Depot with me, he said.

We were going to watch Jon and Kate plus Ei8ht, I said.

He'd rather go to the hardware store.

Zack loves the babies. It's his favorite show.

What do you want to do Zack? Pick the hardware store. Don't be a girl!

There is nothing wrong with being a girl!

Sometimes I think he forgets who he's married to.

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Missing Views

by Tracee Sioux

This is the view I was missing by going to the gym every day. Isn't it fantastic?

Honestly, my life to 33-years-old was not about health. One day I looked at my little family and realized every one of us had a medium-sized weight problem. Well, it wasn't exactly one day - I mean, my husband had been complaining for years and I was ignoring it until my pregnancy phase was over. Then Ainsley's doctor said she was on the border of having a weight issue. Even the baby was so fat I needed to lift weights to pick him up (but, it's cute on a baby).

If a plane gets into trouble they tell you to put the oxygen mask on yourself first. Otherwise, you will render yourself incapacitated and there will be no one to save your children.

I find this method to be useful for other things like creating habits and instituting change in behavior and attitude.

First I got a gym membership and spent a year developing a habit of exercise for the first time in my life. I changed my attitude about it and learned to love it.

I established a clear connection in my brain that said exercise was a real part of our lifestyle before I felt I could give up the gym membership and venture out walking with my kids.

We're up to an easy two miles now. And it's a piece of cake. It's great bonding time and great talking time. Check out the view I was missing!

Monday, December 10, 2007

Lourdes Bashing


While listening to the radio the other day I heard a female DJ pick apart Lourdes, the daughter of Madonna.

Oh My God, that Lourdes needs to be introduced to the tweezers. She not only had a massive uni-brow, but she's got a full on mustache too, said mommy DJ.

The DJ happens to be the mother of a baby girl.

Hello! Lourdes is a little girl. At what age are we mothers expected to sit our daughters down and tweeze, pluck, wax and shave them?

Is 6 too young? Maybe girls should start shaving their legs at 8? The Burning Times has a report on Nair Pretty, a chemical acid hair removal cream, being marketed directly to 10-year-old girls for their clean bikini line. It's profoundly disturbing that I'm no longer shocked.

Maybe it's not even about when the girls might be ready for such milestones into womanhood, maybe it's all about prevention of mean girl attention. Perhaps a mother's best bet is to attempt to prevent scathing criticism of a girl's appearance by prematurely eradicating any hair that might attempt to grow anywhere on her body.

You should be ashamed of yourself Sister DJ. You've just opened the door for bad daughter Karma.

You will find, as your daughter matures, that it is extraordinarily difficult to teach a young girl that appearance isn't everything when all evidence is to the contrary.

Thursday, November 29, 2007

I Want To Be A Model


Mommy, I'm going to be a model.

Well, you can if you really want to. But, I hope you'll never let anyone treat you like they treat models. I hope you'll expect more respect from any employer.

The thing is Tyra, at some point you became "the industry." You chose to perpetrate the abuse against girls rather than change it.

Fierce.

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Pro-Ana Cheerleader Barbies


I admit I vacillate like crazy on the issue of allowing Ainsley to have Barbies. It's a grey area for me. I allowed Barbie for a while, then when I found a decapitated and limbless Barbie massacre on Ainsley's bed I silently cheered for joy and vowed not to replace her.

Some people give me crap about it and think I'm being too extreme. I admit, I've been thinking What's the harm in letter her play with those dolls, really?

Then the universe sends me a message to remind me.

First, I was flipping channels and came across Say Yes To The Dress. A wedding dress consultant asks a full grown woman, what do you want to look like on your wedding day?

Like Barbie, the woman says. She wasn't kidding. Click this link to see her say it.

Then my Barbie-defending friend, Violet, sends me this Cheerleader Barbie Inspires Young Girls.

Could those cheerleaders be any more Pro-ana ? Mattel is calling this their model muse body. It makes me want to be sick - but not to lose weight, just to express disgust.

Seriously, what message do these Barbies have for your daughter? You will never measure up unless you quit eating altogether and have a rib or two removed.

Give Barbies for Christmas if you must, but Ainsley's getting the "chubby" knockoffs.

More Barbie Blogs
How Come Zack Gets A Barbi?
Barbi For President
Bob vs. Barbi
Friends With Barbies

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

It. Is. Sick.


by Tracee Sioux

Our friends Jen and Aaron are in a health insurance nightmare. It's a predicament millions of American's face. They are middle-class. They work hard, they live within their means and are very frugal. Their situation merits attention because they are doing everything right, yet they find themselves in an impossible situation.

One of their twins has cerebral palsy and a seizure disorder. On Jlogged Jen talks about the nightmare she's been living in as a mother trying to advocate for her son. For a while they have benefited from SCHIPS, but now they make too much money to qualify for any programs. They've been being bounced back and forth between public programs due to clerical errors.

Too much to qualify doesn't equal ability to pay for the excessively high costs of health care. That's the rub.

My son is uninsurable. No insurance company will touch him with a ten foot pole. We make too much to get help, but not enough to cover catastrophic costs of health care. We aren’t poor enough. If my husband can find a job with group health insurance it will help, but it is still far from a perfect solution. Until then we are stuck. Our options are limited and all of them suck: a) get a divorce, b) lie, c) put my son in a state nursing home facility d.) go without insurance risking bankruptcy, and going without care that will effect my son for the rest of his life. None of these are acceptable, and this is what the richest country in the world has to offer the disabled children of America. It. Is. Sick.

There is a disconnect in this country about healthcare. I think those who are against universal care haven't received a true medical bill in quite some time. They are under the illusion that healthcare has remained reasonably affordable.

That, or they are insulated from the astronomical costs of healthcare. They are insulated either by good health or unusually high incomes.

If you think any American family could afford to carry the costs of a medical needs child on $50,000 ($12,000 higher than the median income) a year try this: Get out your budget. Add in $300 a month in maintenance medications. Add in $125 every week each for speech therapy and physical therapy. (Lucas is 5 and isn't speaking yet, whether or not he gets speech therapy now has a big impact on whether he will ever speak.) Then add in one life flight and hospital visit at $150,000.

The costs of medical care have exceeded the means of American families if they carry the burden alone. Yet, there is enough resources and wealth as a whole to provide care.

Go over to Jlogged to read more about her family's predicament.

Friday, November 16, 2007

Balancing Act


by Tracee Sioux

How does this sound?

  • Paid family leave so no mother has to go back to work days after giving birth,

  • Public universal pre-school,

  • Major investments in child care so having a child is no longer the top reason American families have "a poverty spell",

  • After school programs for all kids who need them,

  • Health care for all children,

  • Benefits for part-time workers, and

  • Telecommuting incentives so parents have more flexible work options.

  • While I am a so-called liberal democrat nearly everyone I know and love is a conservative Christian.

    Here's the thing - we all want the same things and share the same basic values.

    Women who describe themselves as "stay-at-home-moms" are working. They are working part-time for low pay and getting no benefits, no security, no acknowledgement or validation from their work, but they ARE working.

    Women who describe themselves as "working mothers" would stay at home more and work fewer hours given the flexibility and choice.

    Then there is a whole class of women who vacillate between the two distinctions and make various compromises depending on age of children and practical economics. Those compromises usually sacrifice health care and benefits for more time. It's not a necessary sacrifice when we could just require employers to offer it up without penalty.

    We, as voters and citizens, need to remember that the government works for us. Not the other way around. In a democracy, we get to decide what the rules are and how the game is played. We do that by writing letters and electing the people that are looking out for our best interests. Let the employer look out for his own best interest - they pay people to lobby for that. The US Constitution wasn't design to protect employers, it was designed to protect We, the People.

    Both the liberal Democrat and the conservative Republican family can see how telecommuting, working from home, benefits for part-time work, paid family leave, after school programs and health care are good for every family in America.

    American families deserve it and Momsrising is demanding it. There is a bill before congress right now called The Balancing Act that makes life easier for families.

    If you want to see the divorce rate go down and more face-time between kids and their parents, it's laws like The Balancing Act that make it possible.

    Follow this link and write your representatives and tell them you expect the American Government to do this for American Families.

    Our daughters deserve better choices than we have. Just as we have better choices than our mothers.

    Thursday, November 15, 2007

    Smoke Out


    by Tracee Sioux

    I can hardly wait for New Year's Eve to come because I never have to put "Quit Smoking - for real this time" on my list of resolutions again. I can move on to getting organized and saving my receipts so I can deduct them.

    The best thing about this year is that I've become a non-smoker. I really and truly quit smoking. Well, maybe the very best thing is that I've encouraged thousands of other smokers, to become non-smokers with the breakout success of one BlogFabulous post about the miracle drug Chantix (around 957 comments). It got so difficult to load up I started a new quit smoking support site at Quit Coping. It feels fantastic to effect the soul of the world in such a positive way.

    If you still smoke here's what I want you to know:

    You've been underestimating the tole smoking is taking on your emotional life.

    The chronic sense of failure, guilt and shame is effecting everything you say, think and do. You've been doing it so long that you think it's who you are.

    It's not.

    You'll have to take my word for it, but after a few months you'll discover a deeper person underneath all those negative surface emotions and that person is worth knowing.

    It's liberating and confidence-boosting to be without that sense of shame, guilt and failure.

    Smoking undermined every relationship in my life. If you always leave a conversation to smoke you rob yourself of the full relationship - usually the healing, reconciliation and understanding that comes at the end of conversations.

    You think you can't find the emotional strength to deal with people because you've been mentally checking out as soon as conflict comes up by thinking about how you'll escape to smoke.

    That you can't deal with stress is a fiction created by your addiction to cigarettes. Period. It's a fiction and it will take some pain and a lot of practice - but you deserve to know that you can deal with everything you think you can't deal with. You can learn to deal with stress, loss, pain, trauma, anxiety, insomnia, conflict, boredom and every other emotion you've avoided by smoking.

    You'll need to dedicate yourself to finding new coping strategies for every instance where you previously smoked. That's seriously uncomfortable. It's painful sometimes. It's overwhelming. I promise you - it's worth it.

    There is no way to quit smoking with total ease and comfort. But, Chantix will take the edge off. And if you're a smoker, I know you understand that by edge I don't mean a slight discomfort, I mean the depths of hell. Chantix will elevate you to purgatory levels of discomfort which almost feels like heaven if you've ever been to the depths of hell.

    Today is the Great International Smoke Out. Ten years ago I ended up on the front page of a Lithuanian newspaper for smoking it up on the street on this day. It's embarrassing to be held up as the epitome of stupidly continuing to smoke.

    This year, when I see smokers on the street, I want to tell you: You don't have to smoke anymore.

    Stop by Quit Coping and I'll hang with you every step of the way while you give up this self-loathing, self-defeating habit. You deserve to be a non-smoker.

    Family Visit and Maturity
    Blog Fabulous/Chantix (1,000 comments)
    I suck
    Addiction Off

    Wednesday, November 7, 2007

    Girl Drama


    by Tracee Sioux

    Am I the only mother who actually cried when I realized my daughter would have to experience the trauma of junior high school?

    I now realize that was silly of me - girl drama starts much earlier now.

    In preschool I got my first taste of it when her BFF Maddy didn't want to play with Caitlin with a C and Kaytlin with a K on the playground. I never could understand why, but I think it came down to Maddy wanting to play with only Ainsley all the time.

    Finally, one day Ainsley told Maddy, I've played with you all the time for the whole year. I've had enough. I'm playing with them now.

    Which, of course, devastated poor Maddy.

    In Kindergarten there are more girls involved.

    The reports I get from her teacher are glowing, Ainsley's popular and has a close group of friends. She gets along well with the other children. She's is not bullied and does not bully others. She's a perfect student. Very helpful.

    Which is inconsistent with what Ainsley tells me about her day.

    It seems every single day she fights with Taylor or Aaron about who is going to play "The Mom" or swing on the swings. And everyday it ends with these words,

    Fine. I'm not your friend anymore. I'm never playing with you again.

    Every time she seems to resolve her issues with her classmates Taylor and Aaron, BFF Maddy's class comes out for recess. They get upset when Ainsley abandons them to play with her BFF. Maddy apparently has no interest, once again, in being friends with Taylor and Aaron and Taylor and Aaron don't really like Maddy, says Ainsley.

    Pre-Kindergarten it was my easily-held belief that ALL bullying and mean girl behavior should be punished harshly in the early years to prevent such nastiness from culminating in junior high.

    Obviously, there is some mean girl behavior going on on the playground. But, the stories are so involved that I'm not sure exactly who should be punished or even if punishment would accomplish anything.

    I'm thrilled that Ainsley is coming to me for advice, but frankly I haven't much.

    I never really did learn to win with girls in school.

    Tuesday, November 6, 2007

    How Do You Spell Zac Efron?


    by Tracee Sioux

    I found myself facing a modern-day dilemma when my 6-year-old daughter, Ainsley, started surfing the net.

    I suppose in my mind it I thought it would go something like this:

    My 10-year-old daughter would come to me and say, Mom, I need to do a report in school. Is it okay if I learn to Google now?

    Of course, Darling, but you know the Internet has a lot of issues with inappropriate content, so we need to go over a list of rules about opening email and files and what pages are off-limits.

    Yeah okay. Here's how that went in real life.

    Mom. Log me on to Disney.com.

    I obeyed.

    How do you spell Zac Efron?

    Z-A-C - space - E-F-R-O-N

    After 15 minutes of watching Oprah and folding laundry, I look over at the computer screen and realize my 6-year-old daughter has been randomly clicking entertainment gossip blogs and tabloid websites (read: soft porn). It's only a matter of time before Zac Efron's girlfriend, Vanessa Hudgens, appears naked on our computer screen. Not to mention all those nasty text ads advertising the actual sale of girls, she might randomly click.

    Ainsley, I think you should go read a book or something.

    After the kids are in bed,Honey, I think it's time to install the Internet Safety software, immediately. Ainsley learned to Google today.

    Hop on over to the Internet Safety Advisor for Parental Safety Tips for guidelines on how to allow children to safely navigate their first movie-star crush.

    And please, leave all the advice you've got on good software and effective rules.

    Thursday, October 25, 2007

    Fashion Police (I mean, Policy)


    This is what Ainsley wore to school yesterday.

    If you don't get up right now I'm picking your clothes, I tell her. She leaps out of bed every time.

    What's your fashion policy?

    Monday, October 8, 2007

    Political Survey


    This website aims to be bi-partisan. In the sense that I'm interested in what the most empowering thing for girls is. I'm a Democrat, but the focus of the site is girl-empowering so I give myself permission to take conservative stances on issues that effect girls.

    Misogynistic and violent/sexual television like glamorizing rape on Gossip Girl, would be a "conservative" stance I find myself taking. Free speech is one of the highest principles, but marketing "you're an object, your a sex toy, you're a whore, you can't say no, rape is sexy" is only in the best interest of pornographers, not girls or the boys who date them. Given a choice between free speech of perverts and the protection of teenage girls - I choose girls as they make up half the population. Hopefully, (please God let it be true) pornographers and rapists do not make up half the population.

    By the same token I hope that conservatives will look at health care. I hope they'll see that health care is an issue that effects everyone in the country. Sometimes I think we need to let go of our rigid stances for just a little while to accomplish something bigger. Take health care and abortion. Both issues deeply effect girls. But abortion, really effects very few girls and conservatives have two new supreme court judges to hold their position. Maybe they could vote for health care instead? Health care effects every single citizen, girl and boy, woman and man.

    There's a political survey that tells you which candidate is most closely aligned with your views. When taking this Political Survey I challenge you to ask yourself:


    * Does the political issue give a girl more choices?

    * Does it open doors for her?

    * Does it protect her?

    * Can she thrive in an environment with this kind of policy or law?

    * Does it inhibit her freedom to be whoever she wants?


    A little introspection about this election is in order, I think. The survey provides a good chance to reevaluate the importance of political issues and helps you determine which issue really is the most important to you as a voter.

    Monday, September 24, 2007

    Ainsley, Perfect You


    Please steal this idea for your daughter's Christmas or birthday. I felt with all the negative media images my daughter had to face I wanted to arm her with a really, really good one. I wrote her a book, about herself, for her 5th birthday titled Ainsley, Perfect You.

    I used MyPublisher.com because they have a storybook option that let me add more than a caption. When she's feeling anxious about things like the first day of school I take it down and read it to her. It's a very affordable thing any parent can do, it does take some time and planning.

    Wednesday, September 19, 2007

    See That One Girl?


    This is the company photo for WordPress.com. See that one woman among all the men? This is 2007 and we talk a lot about all the opportunities available to women, but this is a current photo not a flashback to the 1970s.

    What do we say to our daughters about that one girl? Do we encourage our daughters to emulate her, join her, be like her? Or do we criticize her fashion sense and hair?

    Do we tell our daughters that math and science pay a lot more than traditionally female occupations like teaching and social work?

    When we're encouraging a hobby it might be better to forgo the tap class and encourage chess club. Parents of girls should get extra-excited about math ability and foster a curiosity about computers.

    Monday, September 17, 2007

    "A" Is For . . .


    by Tracee Sioux

    My daughter was reciting all the things about "A" she had learned her first week in Kindergarten.

    A is for alligator, apple tree, astronaut, Ainsley.

    Then she handed the phone back to me.

    Well, when she was reciting all the things that start with A, I refrained from listing Asshole.

    Well, thanks for showing some restraint Mom, I said. Sometimes I don't even know who you are. When I was a kid I would have sworn you would never, ever say the word Asshole. Let alone be tempted to say it to a five-year-old.

    I would have sworn the same thing. Then I had you.

    You mean parenting a child like myself in particular, or the experience of mothering in general?

    It was parenting you. When you have a kid like you and you start defending them to people, you don't realize how many assholes there are in the world. The world is pretty full of assholes.

    I've learned more things about things I never, ever wanted to know about or understand being your mother. Well, and Larry's wife. The two of you. I was so naive. I've really had to grow and learn being married to him and mothering you. You two are my trials to endure. You're the people in my life that force me to grow.

    My poor mother. She'd have chosen a life of rule following, respecting authority and blending in.

    Then she had me and I would have none of it - straight from the go. Challenging authority, questioning the status quo, getting into trouble, experimenting with addiction, using my voice loudly and publicly, forever going against the grain.

    She did defend me too. I remember she took on the vice-principal of my junior high when I kicked out a window at school. I went right to him and confessed and offered to pay for it. I kicked it, but was surprised it had broken. My intention wasn't to vandalize. The principal expelled me for the rest of the year and she fought that. But, you know what she would have chosen for herself? That I was not the type of kid to kick anything. That I would have just nicely and politely gone to class.

    I put my mother through hell. People always make vague comments about myself to me. My grandmother recently wrote, You always have marched to a different drummer.

    I never do know what they really mean. I always choose to take it as a compliment. But, I'm vague about how people really perceive me. I never quite understand how exactly I'm so different. Occasionally I'll struggle against it, my nature, but it's futile. I worry that my daughter is too much like me, and girls like us are really such a challenge to mother.


    Well behaved women rarely make history.

    Laurel Thatcher Ulrich

    Friday, September 7, 2007

    We Vow Now


    by Tracee Sioux

    We, my husband and I, are participating in a federally-funded marriage education course designed to keep the family together. Vow, Healthy Marriage Education Initiative is being funded by the Administration for Children and Families and the US Department of Health and Human Services.

    Marriage. Where to start. Obviously, marriage and the success or failure of marriage deeply effects the empowerment of girls, well all children really. I'm trying to raise an empowered girl, yet I find it increasingly arduous to model a positive marriage relationship.

    My husband and I are one generation removed from Traditional Marriage Stereotypes. Dad equals bread-winner and decision-maker, wife equals care-giver and house-keeper.

    As a culture, we're reinventing marriage and the roles wives and husbands play. In theory, my husband and I agree, but theory only gets you so far. It's the actual division of labor, outside-the-home and inside-the-home, we get hung up on a lot. Not only have neither of us seen the new husband/wife relationship modelled by parents, but our siblings and other familial and religious influences remain pretty traditional.

    I would be ashamed to admit that we find marriage such a struggle if the statistical evidence that we're not alone were not so overwhelming.

    Half of marriages end in divorce. 50%. FIFTY PERCENT. Half!

    That's a huge social problem. Here's why:

    Women who get divorced are more likely to live in poverty, retire homeless, commit suicide or become ill. Men who divorce are less likely to have good relatioships with their children. Their ex-wives and children are more likely to need financial assistance from the government.

    Children who come from divorced homes are less likely to attend college, more likely to do drugs, more likely to become pregnant, more likely to get divorced, more likely to commit crimes, more likely to contract social diseases. Those consequences cost tax-payers a lot of money in prisons, jails, and social services.

    Finally, the federal government has decided to get to the core of the problem and help families find a way to be happier together than apart. This is a virtual standing ovation - APPLAUSE!!

    The program is in a research phase where 225 pocket areas with high rates of divorce have been given $118,644,219 in grant money to determine if this kind of marriage education program will be effective.

    The 6-12 week program focuses on what each person in the relationship brings to the marriage by way of baggage, if you will. There is an examination of assumptions, beliefs and world-views of both marriage partners to identify some of the root problems.

    Once the core issues have been identified there's a rapid move toward conflict resolution. Couples are given practical skills and tools to determine how to compromise and enjoy their marriages.

    Key points that make me hopeful about Vow's success are:

    * The research and foundation for the Vow program is designed around research of HAPPY couples with long marriages. No one wants to be married for 50 years if it's 45 years of pain and struggle. Better a divorce than that. But, wouldn't it be nice if everyone had the secret recipe for how to be happily married for 50 years?
    * The program is a mix of secular and faith-based education, meaning it is designed to help couples navigate their faith issues and come to suitable compromises if they come from different religious backgrounds. It does not promote any one religious belief system, but takes the couple's religious training and desires into account. Churches in Vow communities are encouraged to back up the program and provide support.
    * It analyzes pre-conceived gender-roles each partner brings to the marriage, and addresses how that's effecting the division of labor in the family. Working women are still doing 75% of the child-care and house-work. Not to mention the addition of part-time or work-at-home or home-school mothering situations that often don't even get "counted" when we're talking about "working moms". That itself could explain the high divorce rate. Women feel tired and undervalued. Men feel misplaced and unneeded.
    * Financial advisers, with no commission motive, are provided for every participating couple. Around 70% of divorces, they say, are over money. Husbands and wives care about money. Enough to get divorced over.
    * Every stage of marriage is accounted for. Dating, engaged, married, separated, living together, common-law marriage and every transitional period from new babies to retirement. Even happily married couples who lost the spark or got a bored are encouraged to participate in Vow.
    * Lots of focus is put on the role and importance of responsible fatherhood. Perhaps feminism and women's role in the workplace cost father's something and perhaps they're feeling undervalued. Vow addresses the issue of deadbeat and disappearing dads as well.

    As I sat listening to the counselor describe how Vow was even going to pay for a couple's retreat, I felt this great sense of relief. A lump in my throat gathered and I blinked back tears - We don't want a divorce. We just don't know how to have a great marriage.

    The overwhelming response to the Vow billboards in my town echo my thoughts. Families want to stay together, we just don't know how. Change is hard, it's difficult to adjust to new roles and definitions in relationships. It's not easy to reinvent the meaning of wife or husband or mother or father or family. These are not roles and identifiers we want to lose, but they're shifting into undefined territory.

    No success in life can compensate for failure in the home. That's the foundation for the Mormon belief system that I grew up with. I'm profoundly grateful that America is putting some money behind the words "Family Values" and helping American couples redefine marriage.
    Find out if a Vow program is near you here.

    Friday, August 24, 2007

    Sexy News


    by Tracee Sioux

    Here's one more reason to turn the TV off during the local news hour. No journalism experience, but plenty of modeling experience, this is the new "anchor" at an East Texas news station. All journalists with a college degree, apparently we wasted our time.

    And this photograph is actual marketing for the news station complete with billboards on the side of the freeway. Apparently, the station was having such financial problems they have also signed a "reality show" deal to document this little sexualizing the news experiment. The non-stop details of violence wasn't sexy enough for you? Now we should have the journlists dumbed down and showing lots of leg and cleavage?

    Here's the reality - you suck Channel 19.

    I'm disgusted as a serious journalist, a woman, and the mother of a girl.



    To watch me give my opinion on an issue on a competing station click here. Of course, it's another sexy news topic.

    Tuesday, August 21, 2007

    Bloghers Act Poll

    Blogher has opened the Blogher's Act Cause - one cause they would like women bloggers to focus on making a tangible change in over the next year - up for a vote. Many of them included health issues.

    Obviously, for the purposes of So Sioux Me, I voted for Girls Health . There are quite a few women's health issues that could be resolved before a girl reaches womanhood. Can we say HPV vaccine, dating violence, body image, self worth, eating disorders, sexual abuse, to name only a few.






    Please participate in the poll through Aug. 25 at midnight. United, women can impact the world, divided we're just nagging, bitching and complaining with limited power to change anything. Click here to put your two cents in.

    Monday, August 20, 2007

    Coaching Advice


    by Tracee Sioux

    I went to the soccer league meeting on Saturday and they gave some interesting advice to the coaches.

    If your team is winning 5-0 at half time, it's your responsibility, as the coach, to stop making goals and try to lose. Put yourself in the other team's place. You wouldn't like it if you went home defeated 15-0. It's no fun for the kids or their parents.

    Dur. Huh?

    I get it. I'm on board with their reasoning. I just think it's interesting.

    What planet are we preparing our children to live on?

    Showing posts with label blogfabulous. Show all posts
    Showing posts with label blogfabulous. Show all posts

    Friday, January 18, 2008

    Allomothering


    I love the concept of allomothering, especially for daughters.

    Allomothering is non-maternal infant care.

    It usually refers to fathers, aunts, grandmothers or siblings of an animal caring for and nurturing it while mommy takes a break or goes out foraging.

    While you'll never hear me say anyone can take the place of Mommy, there are benefits of providing as much exposure to other family members, friends, and caretakers and babysitters as possible. There are obvious benefits of allowing a child to be surround by many people who love them.

    There are also benefits for girls to see how other women live and think. Women have been in dramatic transition in the last 30 years and different women have reacted in various ways.

    Exposure to the different choices women make can only benefit daughters. There is no right or single way to be a woman - more choices for daughters is what I'm after.

    If girls only see the one way their own mother's live out their chosen roles we rob them of exposure to all the other choices.

    I believe there are also generational hangups that will take more than a single generation of women to iron out or correct. I'm hoping that Ainsley won't have such terrible guilt about working outside the home if that's where her dreams take her. I don't necessarily want her to work fulltime at an office, but any terrible guilt is is an undue burden I don't want to put on her.

    Ainsley is quite lucky in that she has many women who are more than willing to allomother her. She has two sets of grandparents, aunts, uncles and cousins, family friends, even three sets of great-grandparents.

    My parents are coming to stay with the kids while I jaunt off with my man on a business trip to Atlanta for 5 whole days. I love that my parents are willing to do this and I love that Ainsley will have the attention, love, affection and interaction of others.

    Exposure to a different way of doing things is healthy for girls to experience.

    Friday, January 11, 2008

    Don't Be A Girl


    Get your shoes on Zack, come to Home Depot with me, he said.

    We were going to watch Jon and Kate plus Ei8ht, I said.

    He'd rather go to the hardware store.

    Zack loves the babies. It's his favorite show.

    What do you want to do Zack? Pick the hardware store. Don't be a girl!

    There is nothing wrong with being a girl!

    Sometimes I think he forgets who he's married to.

    Wednesday, December 12, 2007

    Missing Views

    by Tracee Sioux

    This is the view I was missing by going to the gym every day. Isn't it fantastic?

    Honestly, my life to 33-years-old was not about health. One day I looked at my little family and realized every one of us had a medium-sized weight problem. Well, it wasn't exactly one day - I mean, my husband had been complaining for years and I was ignoring it until my pregnancy phase was over. Then Ainsley's doctor said she was on the border of having a weight issue. Even the baby was so fat I needed to lift weights to pick him up (but, it's cute on a baby).

    If a plane gets into trouble they tell you to put the oxygen mask on yourself first. Otherwise, you will render yourself incapacitated and there will be no one to save your children.

    I find this method to be useful for other things like creating habits and instituting change in behavior and attitude.

    First I got a gym membership and spent a year developing a habit of exercise for the first time in my life. I changed my attitude about it and learned to love it.

    I established a clear connection in my brain that said exercise was a real part of our lifestyle before I felt I could give up the gym membership and venture out walking with my kids.

    We're up to an easy two miles now. And it's a piece of cake. It's great bonding time and great talking time. Check out the view I was missing!

    Monday, December 10, 2007

    Lourdes Bashing


    While listening to the radio the other day I heard a female DJ pick apart Lourdes, the daughter of Madonna.

    Oh My God, that Lourdes needs to be introduced to the tweezers. She not only had a massive uni-brow, but she's got a full on mustache too, said mommy DJ.

    The DJ happens to be the mother of a baby girl.

    Hello! Lourdes is a little girl. At what age are we mothers expected to sit our daughters down and tweeze, pluck, wax and shave them?

    Is 6 too young? Maybe girls should start shaving their legs at 8? The Burning Times has a report on Nair Pretty, a chemical acid hair removal cream, being marketed directly to 10-year-old girls for their clean bikini line. It's profoundly disturbing that I'm no longer shocked.

    Maybe it's not even about when the girls might be ready for such milestones into womanhood, maybe it's all about prevention of mean girl attention. Perhaps a mother's best bet is to attempt to prevent scathing criticism of a girl's appearance by prematurely eradicating any hair that might attempt to grow anywhere on her body.

    You should be ashamed of yourself Sister DJ. You've just opened the door for bad daughter Karma.

    You will find, as your daughter matures, that it is extraordinarily difficult to teach a young girl that appearance isn't everything when all evidence is to the contrary.

    Thursday, November 29, 2007

    I Want To Be A Model


    Mommy, I'm going to be a model.

    Well, you can if you really want to. But, I hope you'll never let anyone treat you like they treat models. I hope you'll expect more respect from any employer.

    The thing is Tyra, at some point you became "the industry." You chose to perpetrate the abuse against girls rather than change it.

    Fierce.

    Wednesday, November 28, 2007

    Pro-Ana Cheerleader Barbies


    I admit I vacillate like crazy on the issue of allowing Ainsley to have Barbies. It's a grey area for me. I allowed Barbie for a while, then when I found a decapitated and limbless Barbie massacre on Ainsley's bed I silently cheered for joy and vowed not to replace her.

    Some people give me crap about it and think I'm being too extreme. I admit, I've been thinking What's the harm in letter her play with those dolls, really?

    Then the universe sends me a message to remind me.

    First, I was flipping channels and came across Say Yes To The Dress. A wedding dress consultant asks a full grown woman, what do you want to look like on your wedding day?

    Like Barbie, the woman says. She wasn't kidding. Click this link to see her say it.

    Then my Barbie-defending friend, Violet, sends me this Cheerleader Barbie Inspires Young Girls.

    Could those cheerleaders be any more Pro-ana ? Mattel is calling this their model muse body. It makes me want to be sick - but not to lose weight, just to express disgust.

    Seriously, what message do these Barbies have for your daughter? You will never measure up unless you quit eating altogether and have a rib or two removed.

    Give Barbies for Christmas if you must, but Ainsley's getting the "chubby" knockoffs.

    More Barbie Blogs
    How Come Zack Gets A Barbi?
    Barbi For President
    Bob vs. Barbi
    Friends With Barbies

    Wednesday, November 21, 2007

    It. Is. Sick.


    by Tracee Sioux

    Our friends Jen and Aaron are in a health insurance nightmare. It's a predicament millions of American's face. They are middle-class. They work hard, they live within their means and are very frugal. Their situation merits attention because they are doing everything right, yet they find themselves in an impossible situation.

    One of their twins has cerebral palsy and a seizure disorder. On Jlogged Jen talks about the nightmare she's been living in as a mother trying to advocate for her son. For a while they have benefited from SCHIPS, but now they make too much money to qualify for any programs. They've been being bounced back and forth between public programs due to clerical errors.

    Too much to qualify doesn't equal ability to pay for the excessively high costs of health care. That's the rub.

    My son is uninsurable. No insurance company will touch him with a ten foot pole. We make too much to get help, but not enough to cover catastrophic costs of health care. We aren’t poor enough. If my husband can find a job with group health insurance it will help, but it is still far from a perfect solution. Until then we are stuck. Our options are limited and all of them suck: a) get a divorce, b) lie, c) put my son in a state nursing home facility d.) go without insurance risking bankruptcy, and going without care that will effect my son for the rest of his life. None of these are acceptable, and this is what the richest country in the world has to offer the disabled children of America. It. Is. Sick.

    There is a disconnect in this country about healthcare. I think those who are against universal care haven't received a true medical bill in quite some time. They are under the illusion that healthcare has remained reasonably affordable.

    That, or they are insulated from the astronomical costs of healthcare. They are insulated either by good health or unusually high incomes.

    If you think any American family could afford to carry the costs of a medical needs child on $50,000 ($12,000 higher than the median income) a year try this: Get out your budget. Add in $300 a month in maintenance medications. Add in $125 every week each for speech therapy and physical therapy. (Lucas is 5 and isn't speaking yet, whether or not he gets speech therapy now has a big impact on whether he will ever speak.) Then add in one life flight and hospital visit at $150,000.

    The costs of medical care have exceeded the means of American families if they carry the burden alone. Yet, there is enough resources and wealth as a whole to provide care.

    Go over to Jlogged to read more about her family's predicament.

    Friday, November 16, 2007

    Balancing Act


    by Tracee Sioux

    How does this sound?

  • Paid family leave so no mother has to go back to work days after giving birth,

  • Public universal pre-school,

  • Major investments in child care so having a child is no longer the top reason American families have "a poverty spell",

  • After school programs for all kids who need them,

  • Health care for all children,

  • Benefits for part-time workers, and

  • Telecommuting incentives so parents have more flexible work options.

  • While I am a so-called liberal democrat nearly everyone I know and love is a conservative Christian.

    Here's the thing - we all want the same things and share the same basic values.

    Women who describe themselves as "stay-at-home-moms" are working. They are working part-time for low pay and getting no benefits, no security, no acknowledgement or validation from their work, but they ARE working.

    Women who describe themselves as "working mothers" would stay at home more and work fewer hours given the flexibility and choice.

    Then there is a whole class of women who vacillate between the two distinctions and make various compromises depending on age of children and practical economics. Those compromises usually sacrifice health care and benefits for more time. It's not a necessary sacrifice when we could just require employers to offer it up without penalty.

    We, as voters and citizens, need to remember that the government works for us. Not the other way around. In a democracy, we get to decide what the rules are and how the game is played. We do that by writing letters and electing the people that are looking out for our best interests. Let the employer look out for his own best interest - they pay people to lobby for that. The US Constitution wasn't design to protect employers, it was designed to protect We, the People.

    Both the liberal Democrat and the conservative Republican family can see how telecommuting, working from home, benefits for part-time work, paid family leave, after school programs and health care are good for every family in America.

    American families deserve it and Momsrising is demanding it. There is a bill before congress right now called The Balancing Act that makes life easier for families.

    If you want to see the divorce rate go down and more face-time between kids and their parents, it's laws like The Balancing Act that make it possible.

    Follow this link and write your representatives and tell them you expect the American Government to do this for American Families.

    Our daughters deserve better choices than we have. Just as we have better choices than our mothers.

    Thursday, November 15, 2007

    Smoke Out


    by Tracee Sioux

    I can hardly wait for New Year's Eve to come because I never have to put "Quit Smoking - for real this time" on my list of resolutions again. I can move on to getting organized and saving my receipts so I can deduct them.

    The best thing about this year is that I've become a non-smoker. I really and truly quit smoking. Well, maybe the very best thing is that I've encouraged thousands of other smokers, to become non-smokers with the breakout success of one BlogFabulous post about the miracle drug Chantix (around 957 comments). It got so difficult to load up I started a new quit smoking support site at Quit Coping. It feels fantastic to effect the soul of the world in such a positive way.

    If you still smoke here's what I want you to know:

    You've been underestimating the tole smoking is taking on your emotional life.

    The chronic sense of failure, guilt and shame is effecting everything you say, think and do. You've been doing it so long that you think it's who you are.

    It's not.

    You'll have to take my word for it, but after a few months you'll discover a deeper person underneath all those negative surface emotions and that person is worth knowing.

    It's liberating and confidence-boosting to be without that sense of shame, guilt and failure.

    Smoking undermined every relationship in my life. If you always leave a conversation to smoke you rob yourself of the full relationship - usually the healing, reconciliation and understanding that comes at the end of conversations.

    You think you can't find the emotional strength to deal with people because you've been mentally checking out as soon as conflict comes up by thinking about how you'll escape to smoke.

    That you can't deal with stress is a fiction created by your addiction to cigarettes. Period. It's a fiction and it will take some pain and a lot of practice - but you deserve to know that you can deal with everything you think you can't deal with. You can learn to deal with stress, loss, pain, trauma, anxiety, insomnia, conflict, boredom and every other emotion you've avoided by smoking.

    You'll need to dedicate yourself to finding new coping strategies for every instance where you previously smoked. That's seriously uncomfortable. It's painful sometimes. It's overwhelming. I promise you - it's worth it.

    There is no way to quit smoking with total ease and comfort. But, Chantix will take the edge off. And if you're a smoker, I know you understand that by edge I don't mean a slight discomfort, I mean the depths of hell. Chantix will elevate you to purgatory levels of discomfort which almost feels like heaven if you've ever been to the depths of hell.

    Today is the Great International Smoke Out. Ten years ago I ended up on the front page of a Lithuanian newspaper for smoking it up on the street on this day. It's embarrassing to be held up as the epitome of stupidly continuing to smoke.

    This year, when I see smokers on the street, I want to tell you: You don't have to smoke anymore.

    Stop by Quit Coping and I'll hang with you every step of the way while you give up this self-loathing, self-defeating habit. You deserve to be a non-smoker.

    Family Visit and Maturity
    Blog Fabulous/Chantix (1,000 comments)
    I suck
    Addiction Off

    Wednesday, November 7, 2007

    Girl Drama


    by Tracee Sioux

    Am I the only mother who actually cried when I realized my daughter would have to experience the trauma of junior high school?

    I now realize that was silly of me - girl drama starts much earlier now.

    In preschool I got my first taste of it when her BFF Maddy didn't want to play with Caitlin with a C and Kaytlin with a K on the playground. I never could understand why, but I think it came down to Maddy wanting to play with only Ainsley all the time.

    Finally, one day Ainsley told Maddy, I've played with you all the time for the whole year. I've had enough. I'm playing with them now.

    Which, of course, devastated poor Maddy.

    In Kindergarten there are more girls involved.

    The reports I get from her teacher are glowing, Ainsley's popular and has a close group of friends. She gets along well with the other children. She's is not bullied and does not bully others. She's a perfect student. Very helpful.

    Which is inconsistent with what Ainsley tells me about her day.

    It seems every single day she fights with Taylor or Aaron about who is going to play "The Mom" or swing on the swings. And everyday it ends with these words,

    Fine. I'm not your friend anymore. I'm never playing with you again.

    Every time she seems to resolve her issues with her classmates Taylor and Aaron, BFF Maddy's class comes out for recess. They get upset when Ainsley abandons them to play with her BFF. Maddy apparently has no interest, once again, in being friends with Taylor and Aaron and Taylor and Aaron don't really like Maddy, says Ainsley.

    Pre-Kindergarten it was my easily-held belief that ALL bullying and mean girl behavior should be punished harshly in the early years to prevent such nastiness from culminating in junior high.

    Obviously, there is some mean girl behavior going on on the playground. But, the stories are so involved that I'm not sure exactly who should be punished or even if punishment would accomplish anything.

    I'm thrilled that Ainsley is coming to me for advice, but frankly I haven't much.

    I never really did learn to win with girls in school.

    Tuesday, November 6, 2007

    How Do You Spell Zac Efron?


    by Tracee Sioux

    I found myself facing a modern-day dilemma when my 6-year-old daughter, Ainsley, started surfing the net.

    I suppose in my mind it I thought it would go something like this:

    My 10-year-old daughter would come to me and say, Mom, I need to do a report in school. Is it okay if I learn to Google now?

    Of course, Darling, but you know the Internet has a lot of issues with inappropriate content, so we need to go over a list of rules about opening email and files and what pages are off-limits.

    Yeah okay. Here's how that went in real life.

    Mom. Log me on to Disney.com.

    I obeyed.

    How do you spell Zac Efron?

    Z-A-C - space - E-F-R-O-N

    After 15 minutes of watching Oprah and folding laundry, I look over at the computer screen and realize my 6-year-old daughter has been randomly clicking entertainment gossip blogs and tabloid websites (read: soft porn). It's only a matter of time before Zac Efron's girlfriend, Vanessa Hudgens, appears naked on our computer screen. Not to mention all those nasty text ads advertising the actual sale of girls, she might randomly click.

    Ainsley, I think you should go read a book or something.

    After the kids are in bed,Honey, I think it's time to install the Internet Safety software, immediately. Ainsley learned to Google today.

    Hop on over to the Internet Safety Advisor for Parental Safety Tips for guidelines on how to allow children to safely navigate their first movie-star crush.

    And please, leave all the advice you've got on good software and effective rules.

    Thursday, October 25, 2007

    Fashion Police (I mean, Policy)


    This is what Ainsley wore to school yesterday.

    If you don't get up right now I'm picking your clothes, I tell her. She leaps out of bed every time.

    What's your fashion policy?

    Monday, October 8, 2007

    Political Survey


    This website aims to be bi-partisan. In the sense that I'm interested in what the most empowering thing for girls is. I'm a Democrat, but the focus of the site is girl-empowering so I give myself permission to take conservative stances on issues that effect girls.

    Misogynistic and violent/sexual television like glamorizing rape on Gossip Girl, would be a "conservative" stance I find myself taking. Free speech is one of the highest principles, but marketing "you're an object, your a sex toy, you're a whore, you can't say no, rape is sexy" is only in the best interest of pornographers, not girls or the boys who date them. Given a choice between free speech of perverts and the protection of teenage girls - I choose girls as they make up half the population. Hopefully, (please God let it be true) pornographers and rapists do not make up half the population.

    By the same token I hope that conservatives will look at health care. I hope they'll see that health care is an issue that effects everyone in the country. Sometimes I think we need to let go of our rigid stances for just a little while to accomplish something bigger. Take health care and abortion. Both issues deeply effect girls. But abortion, really effects very few girls and conservatives have two new supreme court judges to hold their position. Maybe they could vote for health care instead? Health care effects every single citizen, girl and boy, woman and man.

    There's a political survey that tells you which candidate is most closely aligned with your views. When taking this Political Survey I challenge you to ask yourself:


    * Does the political issue give a girl more choices?

    * Does it open doors for her?

    * Does it protect her?

    * Can she thrive in an environment with this kind of policy or law?

    * Does it inhibit her freedom to be whoever she wants?


    A little introspection about this election is in order, I think. The survey provides a good chance to reevaluate the importance of political issues and helps you determine which issue really is the most important to you as a voter.

    Monday, September 24, 2007

    Ainsley, Perfect You


    Please steal this idea for your daughter's Christmas or birthday. I felt with all the negative media images my daughter had to face I wanted to arm her with a really, really good one. I wrote her a book, about herself, for her 5th birthday titled Ainsley, Perfect You.

    I used MyPublisher.com because they have a storybook option that let me add more than a caption. When she's feeling anxious about things like the first day of school I take it down and read it to her. It's a very affordable thing any parent can do, it does take some time and planning.

    Wednesday, September 19, 2007

    See That One Girl?


    This is the company photo for WordPress.com. See that one woman among all the men? This is 2007 and we talk a lot about all the opportunities available to women, but this is a current photo not a flashback to the 1970s.

    What do we say to our daughters about that one girl? Do we encourage our daughters to emulate her, join her, be like her? Or do we criticize her fashion sense and hair?

    Do we tell our daughters that math and science pay a lot more than traditionally female occupations like teaching and social work?

    When we're encouraging a hobby it might be better to forgo the tap class and encourage chess club. Parents of girls should get extra-excited about math ability and foster a curiosity about computers.

    Monday, September 17, 2007

    "A" Is For . . .


    by Tracee Sioux

    My daughter was reciting all the things about "A" she had learned her first week in Kindergarten.

    A is for alligator, apple tree, astronaut, Ainsley.

    Then she handed the phone back to me.

    Well, when she was reciting all the things that start with A, I refrained from listing Asshole.

    Well, thanks for showing some restraint Mom, I said. Sometimes I don't even know who you are. When I was a kid I would have sworn you would never, ever say the word Asshole. Let alone be tempted to say it to a five-year-old.

    I would have sworn the same thing. Then I had you.

    You mean parenting a child like myself in particular, or the experience of mothering in general?

    It was parenting you. When you have a kid like you and you start defending them to people, you don't realize how many assholes there are in the world. The world is pretty full of assholes.

    I've learned more things about things I never, ever wanted to know about or understand being your mother. Well, and Larry's wife. The two of you. I was so naive. I've really had to grow and learn being married to him and mothering you. You two are my trials to endure. You're the people in my life that force me to grow.

    My poor mother. She'd have chosen a life of rule following, respecting authority and blending in.

    Then she had me and I would have none of it - straight from the go. Challenging authority, questioning the status quo, getting into trouble, experimenting with addiction, using my voice loudly and publicly, forever going against the grain.

    She did defend me too. I remember she took on the vice-principal of my junior high when I kicked out a window at school. I went right to him and confessed and offered to pay for it. I kicked it, but was surprised it had broken. My intention wasn't to vandalize. The principal expelled me for the rest of the year and she fought that. But, you know what she would have chosen for herself? That I was not the type of kid to kick anything. That I would have just nicely and politely gone to class.

    I put my mother through hell. People always make vague comments about myself to me. My grandmother recently wrote, You always have marched to a different drummer.

    I never do know what they really mean. I always choose to take it as a compliment. But, I'm vague about how people really perceive me. I never quite understand how exactly I'm so different. Occasionally I'll struggle against it, my nature, but it's futile. I worry that my daughter is too much like me, and girls like us are really such a challenge to mother.


    Well behaved women rarely make history.

    Laurel Thatcher Ulrich

    Friday, September 7, 2007

    We Vow Now


    by Tracee Sioux

    We, my husband and I, are participating in a federally-funded marriage education course designed to keep the family together. Vow, Healthy Marriage Education Initiative is being funded by the Administration for Children and Families and the US Department of Health and Human Services.

    Marriage. Where to start. Obviously, marriage and the success or failure of marriage deeply effects the empowerment of girls, well all children really. I'm trying to raise an empowered girl, yet I find it increasingly arduous to model a positive marriage relationship.

    My husband and I are one generation removed from Traditional Marriage Stereotypes. Dad equals bread-winner and decision-maker, wife equals care-giver and house-keeper.

    As a culture, we're reinventing marriage and the roles wives and husbands play. In theory, my husband and I agree, but theory only gets you so far. It's the actual division of labor, outside-the-home and inside-the-home, we get hung up on a lot. Not only have neither of us seen the new husband/wife relationship modelled by parents, but our siblings and other familial and religious influences remain pretty traditional.

    I would be ashamed to admit that we find marriage such a struggle if the statistical evidence that we're not alone were not so overwhelming.

    Half of marriages end in divorce. 50%. FIFTY PERCENT. Half!

    That's a huge social problem. Here's why:

    Women who get divorced are more likely to live in poverty, retire homeless, commit suicide or become ill. Men who divorce are less likely to have good relatioships with their children. Their ex-wives and children are more likely to need financial assistance from the government.

    Children who come from divorced homes are less likely to attend college, more likely to do drugs, more likely to become pregnant, more likely to get divorced, more likely to commit crimes, more likely to contract social diseases. Those consequences cost tax-payers a lot of money in prisons, jails, and social services.

    Finally, the federal government has decided to get to the core of the problem and help families find a way to be happier together than apart. This is a virtual standing ovation - APPLAUSE!!

    The program is in a research phase where 225 pocket areas with high rates of divorce have been given $118,644,219 in grant money to determine if this kind of marriage education program will be effective.

    The 6-12 week program focuses on what each person in the relationship brings to the marriage by way of baggage, if you will. There is an examination of assumptions, beliefs and world-views of both marriage partners to identify some of the root problems.

    Once the core issues have been identified there's a rapid move toward conflict resolution. Couples are given practical skills and tools to determine how to compromise and enjoy their marriages.

    Key points that make me hopeful about Vow's success are:

    * The research and foundation for the Vow program is designed around research of HAPPY couples with long marriages. No one wants to be married for 50 years if it's 45 years of pain and struggle. Better a divorce than that. But, wouldn't it be nice if everyone had the secret recipe for how to be happily married for 50 years?
    * The program is a mix of secular and faith-based education, meaning it is designed to help couples navigate their faith issues and come to suitable compromises if they come from different religious backgrounds. It does not promote any one religious belief system, but takes the couple's religious training and desires into account. Churches in Vow communities are encouraged to back up the program and provide support.
    * It analyzes pre-conceived gender-roles each partner brings to the marriage, and addresses how that's effecting the division of labor in the family. Working women are still doing 75% of the child-care and house-work. Not to mention the addition of part-time or work-at-home or home-school mothering situations that often don't even get "counted" when we're talking about "working moms". That itself could explain the high divorce rate. Women feel tired and undervalued. Men feel misplaced and unneeded.
    * Financial advisers, with no commission motive, are provided for every participating couple. Around 70% of divorces, they say, are over money. Husbands and wives care about money. Enough to get divorced over.
    * Every stage of marriage is accounted for. Dating, engaged, married, separated, living together, common-law marriage and every transitional period from new babies to retirement. Even happily married couples who lost the spark or got a bored are encouraged to participate in Vow.
    * Lots of focus is put on the role and importance of responsible fatherhood. Perhaps feminism and women's role in the workplace cost father's something and perhaps they're feeling undervalued. Vow addresses the issue of deadbeat and disappearing dads as well.

    As I sat listening to the counselor describe how Vow was even going to pay for a couple's retreat, I felt this great sense of relief. A lump in my throat gathered and I blinked back tears - We don't want a divorce. We just don't know how to have a great marriage.

    The overwhelming response to the Vow billboards in my town echo my thoughts. Families want to stay together, we just don't know how. Change is hard, it's difficult to adjust to new roles and definitions in relationships. It's not easy to reinvent the meaning of wife or husband or mother or father or family. These are not roles and identifiers we want to lose, but they're shifting into undefined territory.

    No success in life can compensate for failure in the home. That's the foundation for the Mormon belief system that I grew up with. I'm profoundly grateful that America is putting some money behind the words "Family Values" and helping American couples redefine marriage.
    Find out if a Vow program is near you here.

    Friday, August 24, 2007

    Sexy News


    by Tracee Sioux

    Here's one more reason to turn the TV off during the local news hour. No journalism experience, but plenty of modeling experience, this is the new "anchor" at an East Texas news station. All journalists with a college degree, apparently we wasted our time.

    And this photograph is actual marketing for the news station complete with billboards on the side of the freeway. Apparently, the station was having such financial problems they have also signed a "reality show" deal to document this little sexualizing the news experiment. The non-stop details of violence wasn't sexy enough for you? Now we should have the journlists dumbed down and showing lots of leg and cleavage?

    Here's the reality - you suck Channel 19.

    I'm disgusted as a serious journalist, a woman, and the mother of a girl.



    To watch me give my opinion on an issue on a competing station click here. Of course, it's another sexy news topic.

    Tuesday, August 21, 2007

    Bloghers Act Poll

    Blogher has opened the Blogher's Act Cause - one cause they would like women bloggers to focus on making a tangible change in over the next year - up for a vote. Many of them included health issues.

    Obviously, for the purposes of So Sioux Me, I voted for Girls Health . There are quite a few women's health issues that could be resolved before a girl reaches womanhood. Can we say HPV vaccine, dating violence, body image, self worth, eating disorders, sexual abuse, to name only a few.






    Please participate in the poll through Aug. 25 at midnight. United, women can impact the world, divided we're just nagging, bitching and complaining with limited power to change anything. Click here to put your two cents in.

    Monday, August 20, 2007

    Coaching Advice


    by Tracee Sioux

    I went to the soccer league meeting on Saturday and they gave some interesting advice to the coaches.

    If your team is winning 5-0 at half time, it's your responsibility, as the coach, to stop making goals and try to lose. Put yourself in the other team's place. You wouldn't like it if you went home defeated 15-0. It's no fun for the kids or their parents.

    Dur. Huh?

    I get it. I'm on board with their reasoning. I just think it's interesting.

    What planet are we preparing our children to live on?