Tuesday, January 31, 2023

Ask Me Anything: Ages and Stages

I received quite a few questions along the line of "When do you allow {insert activity} or how do you handle {insert stage}?" So here's a guide to the ages and stages in the Martin house.  Please remember to take this with a huge chunk of salt as I am raising my kids and you are raising your kids and that was by design and not by accident.

Age 3 weeks - Introduce the bottle to my breastfeeding babies.  There will be a time you are away from your baby.  There will be a time said baby gets hungry.  Ain't no stress like a hangry baby who won't take the bottle.  We learned this lesson the hard way with Baby #2 and the rest of them took the bottle just fine.  Phil gives a bottle feeding once a day and I breastfeed the rest of the feedings until I have to return to work, and then I pump until the wells run dry.  After that, it's formula until their first birthday.  This is what worked for us, as a fed baby is a happy baby, and none of it is worth the heartache and stress I used to put myself through.  As my friend, a nurse, used to say "A bottle a day keeps depression away" and trust me, when Phil would do that bottle feeding and I could sleep for a 3 or 4 hour chunk of time...that did indeed keep my baby blues at bay.

Age 1 - Pacifier and blanky (or whatever their comfort item is) lives in the crib now.  Gone are the good old days of sucking on a pacifier willy-nilly.  The baby uses it for sleeping only, and is excited for nap time and bed time to get their precious items.  We find this very helpful to create good sleepers and good talkers.  Also the bottles go away and it's sippy cups only with whole milk or water.  Bedtime is at 7 pm and naptime is only once a day now, after an early lunch, from 11:30 - 2:30 if we're lucky.

Age 2 - Say bye bye to the crib and hello to a big bed.  We do not do the whole toddler bed thing, we just put them in a twin bed with a wall on one side and a bed rail on the other.  My kids still think they are stuck in a crib with this setup and call for us to come and get them when they wake up.

Age 3 - No more pacifiers.  Two of my kids were thumb suckers and thumbs are not easy to throw away ;)  We had them wear a glove to bed that would remind them to try and stop sucking, but honestly they sucked those little thumbies for a lot longer than they let us know.  Our 3 year olds also go to preschool at the same Catholic elementary school their siblings attend.  It's so much cheaper than daycare, so as soon as they are potty trained (which happens in the summer before they attend preschool) off they go!

Age 4 - Ummmm just my favorite age ever.  Soccer starts as do swimming lessons and I feel like you can kind of really see their personality start to shine.  

Age 5 - Chores begin!  I'll do a seperate chore post another day, but Kindergartners are great at wanting to help!  Even if it means I have to do the chore for real after they "try", I still let them try.

Age 6 - Basketball starts.  First graders can pack their own snacks for school, fill their own water bottles, be responsible for getting their homework done, with our help when needed.  

Age 7 - First Reconciliation and First Communion! Bedtime moves from 7 pm to 7:30 pm after their First Communion.  I know, we're wild and crazy over here ;)

Ages 8-9 No major changes that I can think of.  We usually assess the kids interests and talents, move them to a more competitive league if they are showing more skill.  If they are interested in starting an instrument, sometime before age 9 is typically when that happens. Xander started piano lessons at age 6 and Declan started violin lessons at age 8.  Brendan wants to start piano really badly (he's 6) but the teacher thinks he should wait until age 7.  The kids move from baths to showers in these years, though sometimes I make them take a bath when I think they really need to soak a little longer than they scrub.

Age 10 - Double digits baby!  Bedtime moves to 8 pm.  They get a tablet on their birthday.  In truth, they can choose between having a friend birthday party or getting a tablet.  They have all chosen the tablet option except for Eamon, who had the party then bought a tablet with the gift money he received from that party!  He might be our sharpest tool in the shed as he figured out a way to get it all :)

Age 11-12 Bedtimes can get a little later depending on their middle school homework or sports practices and games.  Deodorant appears in stockings and daily showers happen!  Braces are consulted upon and put on if necessary, with the hope of being removed before high school starts.

Age 13 - They receive a Gabb Phone on their birthday, or another smartphone that we dumb down by taking away data and password protecting the app store.  They can babysit younger siblings now.  When they graduate from 8th grade, they receive a laptop for high school (it's required so we turn it into a gift).

Ages 14-15 High schoolers!  No more bedtimes, they just go to bed when they're homework is done or their sports are over.  These are tough years because they need rides everywhere and they want to do everything!  They also need to get a job at age 14 which is when they can get a work permit.

Age 16 - Friend party for their birthday. Open a checking account and get debit card.  Get their driver's permit, having started driver's ed around 15 years 9 months.  Sweet sixteen means they are allowed to date when they have a JOB and a CAR.  Basically, we will not be driving our kids around on dates or financing them.  If you want to take a girl out to dinner, you need to be able to pay for both of your dinners and pick her up and drop her off.  Of course, we talk a lot about the purpose of dating, which is to find your spouse, and encourage them to be friends with the opposite sex and hang out in groups.  When you are sixteen you most likely are not going to start dating your future spouse (though it did happen to two of my siblings!) but you should be dating someone with the qualities you hope to find in your future spouse and stop dating that person when you realize he/she is not the one.  If we could have it our way (insert maniacal laugh) we would prefer they wait until college to date seriously.

Age 17 - Just the same as 16 really except that now they are licensed drivers and their "chore" becomes helping us drive around siblings which nobody seems to mind as it's a chance to drive.  They also get data on their phones since they need to use Maps and check emails, etc.  Once senior year starts, we allow them to sleepover friends' houses as a sort of gateway between living at home and college.  I feel like we are used to them not being home more often than being home between work, sports and social activities now.  It's sad but necessary!

Age 18 - Birthday gift is luggage for college.  For a graduation gift from high school - the boys get a new suit to use at prom and then for college/job interviews (not sure what to get for Maggie yet).  Then they go to college and we just pray we did enough right in raising them and let God take care of filling in the cracks.

Age 19+ Parenting never ends.  Just a friendly reminder :)  And then hopefully, the grandkids come and you can watch your children get their payback become parents themselves!

14 comments:

  1. Oh yes, move them from baths as soon as sensible. Showers are so much easier! And I'm glad I'm not the only mom who likes an early bedtime for kids. Mine can read in bed, but everyone young is up at 8-8:30. when they're getting up at 6 am, they need their rest.

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    1. There are so many studies that show kids need way more sleep than they're probably getting, plus we like a few hours of a calm house each evening ;)

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  2. This is thorough and consistent. I love consistency and we tried, but I'm not sure we completely succeeded. We allowed Reg to get a cell phone in Feb of 8th grade, but the rest waited till 8th grade graduation. I felt like that was the best we could do. Reg's 'friends' excluded him because they couldn't text him. Ugh.

    We had a few thumb suckers too, and I used to try to keep a sock on the hand and urge a pacifier, knowing a paci would be easier to ditch. Not one of the kids took a pacifier. We had a few thumb suckers though. Mini must've found her thumb sucking difficult when teething because she quit at 8 mos old.

    I feel like we weren't great at bedtime enforement once the older kids started staying up late. The place was just LOUD. Plus, bedtimes were non-existent once they joined Irish dancing classes that ended at 9 pm - and then drove home 30 minutes, and then needed another mini meal. Reg, on the other hand, has always put himself to bed when he felt tired. We could be in the middle of a family movie and he would hop up, say good-night, and march off to bed. 'Reg' stands for regimented.

    You two are a great pair and there's no doubt that you've laid an excellent framework for your offspring to be happy and successful in life.

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    1. How nice of you to say :) Our kids will still say "That's not fair" not matter how consistent we are or how much we try to explain our reasoning, so you never can win!

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  3. I especially love that you've ended this with parenting never ends. Thank you for not being an idiot so if I wanted to do some of these things you do I could. ;)

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    1. I'll try to not be an idiot just for you!!

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  4. Loved every word of this! Have you written before about the phones? That is a big scary thing on the horizon for me, and I am trying to gather as much information as I can. Some kids in my daughter's grade (4) already have phones. My instinct is to hold off as long as possible, but I think that's problematic in some ways. Would love to know your thought process!

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    1. I have written about phones here: https://martinfamilymoments.blogspot.com/2020/11/my-name-is-colleen-and-im-mom-of.html

      We wait until 13 because we don't have a home phone and we need them to start babysitting at that age. We totally dumb down their phones and set up rules like they have to be plugged in at a certain time, in the kitchen, no technology up in their rooms...but by the time they are 16+ we are not as strict/too tired. It is such a parenting struggle!!!

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  5. oh! I love this. we have Gabb phones too.... Do you upgrade their phones to get maps? I didn't think Gabb had maps, which I feel is a big let down for drivers

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    1. We switched to giving Gabb phones when Maggie was 13 and then she got an old iphone at 15. I think Gabb is a great first phone to keep them safe and teach them good habits, but they need a smart phone when they start driving, in my opinion.

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  6. What a great list! And yes, it never ends. The only thing is that the older the kid the bigger the problem - or it seems that way to me. But I just try to remember that my kids are what keep me on my knees and closer to God! :)

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  7. I just have to tell you that I have read and re-read this post many times, and am bookmarking it for future reference! My oldest is 9 1/2 so your approach to the tween and teen years is rapidly becoming more relevant, and it just makes so much sense to me.

    Of course no need to share if you don't feel comfortable, but I am curious about your approach to your daughter going on dates. Do you have similar parameters for her in regards to the job or car, even though traditionally she wouldn't be the one asking or picking up a date? I absolutely love how naturally that proof of maturity and responsibility translates to dating for your sons, but gender norms make the correlation a little less direct for girls!

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    1. Same dating rules for Maggie! She needs to be independent enough to pay for herself and drive away if needed :)

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    2. I love it! Thanks for getting back to me!

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