Award-winning author, L.R.Knost

Archive for April, 2012

The Other Baby Book~An Interview with the Author

I’m honored to be a part of the Virtual Book Tour for the release of The Other Baby Book~A Natural Approach to Baby’s First Year!

From their profile:

Ready to get your cradle rocked?

What if the “rules” of modern motherhood were turned upside down?

What if you knew your baby won’t “spoil” if you carry him close?

What if you were the best expert of your own baby?

The Other Baby Book guides new and expecting mothers on a journey past “shoulds” and “musts,” and back to the heart of true joy and connection. Throwing off the shackles of profit-driven companies and popular, yet unproven, baby-rearing practices, Massaro and Katz offer moms simple but profound ways to support the mother-baby relationship. This practical and accessible guide offers…

 • affirmation of mothers’ intuition as our best parenting tool
 • timeless traditions to nurture a close mother-baby bond
 • compelling research to support a healthy lifestyle mom and baby
 • cutting edge commentary by leading practitioners in each field
 • encouraging stories from moms living out these practices

 

Interview with Megan Massaro, author:

What inspired you to write a parenting book?

It took me almost a decade to decide “what I wanted to do with the rest of my life,” post-college. I taught middle and high school English for seven years, but was energized by the time I spent alone, sitting at the kitchen table, reading, researching, and imagining life in the past, and pecking out stories that no one read but me. Eventually, I applied to twelve graduate programs in creative writing. I was going to write epic historical fiction novels set in Europe. Travel to Italy. Talk with old ladies who had age spots on their hands and secret homemade tomato sauce recipes.

But the day I got a phone call from my favorite program’s director was the same day I got that little blue ‘+’ on the pregnancy test. And as Kurt Vonnegut says, and so it goes.

It didn’t feel right to turn down the offer without giving it serious consideration. I spent a week talking to other writers, friends, and older, wiser mothers. The refrain I heard over and over again was, “You shouldn’t stop your life just because you had a baby.” As if birthing new life were on par with adopting a cat or breaking up with your boyfriend. People told me things would “go back to normal” after about six months, so I should just defer a semester. But what about the work, I wondered. Hours spent writing, critiquing others’ writing, and reading. When would that happen? And the semi-annual flights to California for mandatory workshops…could I really leave my baby twice a year for eleven days at a time? Did I even want to?

It was really a non-decision for me. That one step, the courageous, counter-cultural step to forgo a dream of school with days steeped in learning and discussion and debate and flat fingerpads from so much typing, to say ‘no’ to me and ‘yes’ to us—that one step drew a line in the sand for my parenting, too. I wouldn’t approach my daughter with the attitude that she needed to change to make my life easier/better/normal, but rather every day we change together, always dancing and finding the rhythm that puts us in sync with one another.

So, instead of researching the history of the Sicilian mafia, I poured over parenting books. In anticipation of going back to school, I quit my job, and accepted a very part-time teaching position, leaving me plenty of time to read book after book, hoping to prepare myself for this amazingly life-changing event.

While I found ideas that resonated with me, there were holes. Gaps. No one book took me from birth to the end of that first year. I read Ina May’s birth books, two books on Elimination Communication, three books and the entire La Leche League website on breastfeeding, a book on Baby-led Weaning, several of Dr. Sears’ books, two books on co-sleeping, countless numbers of Dr. McKenna’s research reports, and a host of post-partum health books.

And then there was the internet. Forums, articles, Facebook posts, BabyCenter emails. It was all enough to make someone nutty, really. I had to sift through a lot of rocks to get to the jewels. But I did, and it was worth it. I learned that allowing your baby’s cord to pulse for several minutes after birth is a life-giving and incredibly beneficial practice. I learned that wearing your baby in a carrier decreases their risk of ear infections and can actually take the place of the dreaded tummy time. I found out that not only are diapers optional, but some cultures don’t use them at all.

I learned that a mother’s intuition is no longer trusted.

Somewhere along the way, it seems many of us started believing that perhaps society was right. Maybe we really do need books and experts and gadgets, hospitals and diapers and cribs and bottles. There’s nothing wrong with any of these things in and of themselves (we gave birth in a hospital and Anabella wore diapers), but along with the cultural wisdom and confidence that mothers are enough, we have lost the option to choose.

About half way through Anabella’s first year, I teamed up with another revolutionary mama, and that old dream to write was revived, only it took on another twist—one that made sense for me in my current life stage. We wrote a book. It’s about mothers and babies, and the solid, mom-affirming wisdom our grandmothers’ grandmothers’ used to share around the table over a pot of tea, about trusting yourself to make the right decisions for your family.

It’s not your average baby book.

It’s The Other Baby Book…A Natural Approach to Baby’s First Year.

You can find The Other Baby Book on Amazon or in select local bookstores.

Join the TOBB community on Facebook or learn more about the book on their website.

Megan Massaro is a freelance writer who still dreams of traveling to Italy (again) to research that epic historical fiction novel. For now though, she’s more than content to share life with her daughter and husband in Boston, MA.

Award-winnning author, L.R.Knost, is the founder and director of the children's rights advocacy and family consulting group, Little Hearts/Gentle Parenting Resources, and Editor-in-Chief of Holistic Parenting Magazine. Books by L.R.Knost include Whispers Through Time: Communication Through the Ages and Stages of Childhood ; Two Thousand Kisses a Day: Gentle Parenting Through the Ages and Stages ; The Gentle Parent: Positive, Practical, Effective Discipline ; and Jesus, the Gentle Parent: Gentle Christian Parenting the first four books in the Little Hearts Handbook gentle parenting series, and children’s picture books Petey’s Listening Ears and the soon-to-be-released Grumpykins series.


Spirit-Led Parenting: From Fear to Freedom in Baby’s First Year

I’m so pleased to be a part of the Virtual Book Tour for the release of Spirit-Led Parenting: From Fear to Freedom in Baby’s First Year by Megan Tietz and Laura OyerAt the moment,  I’m working on an article on some of the misconceptions that have led to the rise of some awful and destructive parenting practices that are being foisted upon parents who are just looking for help in doing the best possible job of raising their children. Just researching these parenting practices has my stomach tied up in knots and my heart hurting so badly I couldn’t sleep last night.

So waking this morning with an opportunity to share this refreshingly honest and honestly refreshing parenting book is…well, refreshing! Written by two mothers who struggled with that universal need to ‘do parenting right’ and yet felt deeply the inherent wrongness of the advice they found in mainstream books by self-proclaimed parenting ‘experts,’ Spirit-Led Parenting: From Fear to Freedom in Baby’s First Year is an account of their struggles and tears on the journey to gentle parenting.

From their profile:

“Over the years, a mainstream approach to Christian parenting has emerged, and it’s one that promotes sleep training and feeding schedules for infants, warns that spoiled children and marital discord are certain by-products of homes where newborns are over-indulged, and promotes these methods as the Biblical way to care for a new baby. Unfortunately, the message of mainstream parenting advice preys… on the universal fear of new parents everywhere: the fear that if they stray from the program, their babies and their marriages will suffer.

In Spirit-Led Parenting: From Fear to Freedom in Baby’s First Year, two mothers share their stories. They tell of a journey that began in fear-soaked, tear-stained days marked by an overwhelming fear of failure that eventually found redemption in discovering the freedom to ignore the wisdom of man and follow the direction of the Spirit.

This gentle path looks toward the example of God the Father, seeks after Christ’s unequivocal call to servanthood, and leans upon the wisdom of the Holy Spirit in determining and meeting the individual needs of each unique child. Spirit-Led Parenting doesn’t encourage a methodology, but rather a mindset. This outlook on parenting is radically different from what has become the trend in Christian circles, and yet the authors believe that it is firmly rooted in and supported by Scripture.

Throughout the book, the authors show how parenting with a spirit-led approach has allowed them to become more peaceful, happy mothers, more intimately connected to their husbands, and closer and more surrendered to Christ. Sharing from their unique experiences as well as their shared philosophy, Megan and Laura play the role of big sisters, wrapping their arms around the shoulder of the new mother trying to navigate the confusing world of life with a baby and answering those important questions:  “What if the ‘right’ way doesn’t feel ‘right’?” and “Could there be more than one way to honor God as I care for my baby?” There is another way.  That’s what they wish they had been told as new mothers.  And it’s the message they are passionate about sharing with new parents everywhere.”

Here’s my virtual author interview with these gentle mamas and lovely writers:

What inspired you to write a parenting book?

Our inspiration and motivation for writing this book came straight from the heart of our own parenting journeys. Each of us entered motherhood with an intense desire to do things the “right way”: the way that would honor God and our marriages and produce well-behaved, well-adjusted children. And we both discovered that there was no shortage of advice to be found on what exactly that way looked like! Once we actually held our children in our arms, though, we each began to feel a huge disconnect between the direction we’d been told was right and the one in which our hearts seemed to be leading us. The problem was that we weren’t ready to trust our hearts.

The crash that resulted in each of our lives as we failed time and time again to meet the expectations of the mainstream infant-parenting methodology is where our stories in Spirit-Led Parenting begin. The core of our book is the redemptive journey of how we went from tears of frustration and disillusionment to peace and fulfillment as God gently revealed to us the truth that there is another way to approach the first year of parenting. That message changed our lives, and we feel an intense passion now to share it with new parents everywhere.

 

What one person or idea has most impacted your parenting philosophy?

It sounds cliché, of course, but in this case it is fully true: our parenting philosophy has been shaped, stretched, and strengthened by the three-in-one person of the Trinity – Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

In our book, we tell about how God revealed His ever-present Father heart in our lives as an example to look to as we cared for our babies. We speak of the way that parenting in the infant months became a vividly tangible opportunity to live out Christ’s call to servanthood. And we delve into the often-painful, often-messy, eventually-beautiful process of how we each learned to recognize a new truth: that every mother and father can freely call upon the wisdom of the Spirit to guide them toward the right parenting path for their unique family.

 

Summarize your book or list the chapters with brief summaries.

Our book is made up of two sections. In Section One, we give an overview of our story and the basic beliefs that comprise our philosophy. In Section Two, we show more about what it looks like when our philosophy meets reality by discussing what Spirit-Led Parenting may look like in the areas of infant feeding, infant sleep, co-sleeping, scheduling, connection, marriage, and sex.

We don’t rely on a one-size-fits-all formula and we steer clear of insisting on any mandates. Instead, we just try to offer encouragement for each family to follow the path illuminated for them by the Spirit of God.

 

Thank you so much for allowing us to share our hearts and message with you today. Please join us as we continue our blog tour in the upcoming weeks:

Spirit-Led Parenting is the first release from authors Megan Tietz and Laura Oyer. Megan writes about faith, family and natural living at SortaCrunchy and lives in western Oklahoma with her husband and two daughters. Laura blogs her reflections on the real and ridiculous things of life at In The Backyard, and makes her home in Indiana with her husband, daughter, and son.

Award-winnning author, L.R.Knost, is the founder and director of the children's rights advocacy and family consulting group, Little Hearts/Gentle Parenting Resources, and Editor-in-Chief of Holistic Parenting Magazine. Books by L.R.Knost include Whispers Through Time: Communication Through the Ages and Stages of Childhood ; Two Thousand Kisses a Day: Gentle Parenting Through the Ages and Stages ; The Gentle Parent: Positive, Practical, Effective Discipline ; and Jesus, the Gentle Parent: Gentle Christian Parenting the first four books in the Little Hearts Handbook gentle parenting series, and children’s picture books Petey’s Listening Ears and the soon-to-be-released Grumpykins series.


Easter Eggs, an Empty Tomb, and an Exploding Dishwasher

Chocolate? What chocolate?

Life with kids is messy. Just ask God. He’s got a whole planet of them, and the scrapes they get themselves into are the stuff of legends, literally! Luckily for us, He’s the best. parent. ever.

That’s one of the things I like best about Easter, celebrating the Original Gentle Parent, the Author of Intentional Parenting, Unconditional Love in Person, and I love sharing and implementing what I learn from His example.

I had a perfect opportunity to implement some of that gentle, intentional, unconditional parenting last night when I headed into the kitchen to color Easter eggs with a clingy, tired baby on one hip and an over-excited six-year-old dancing around my legs, only to find a tidal wave of sudsy bubbles exploding from every crevice of my dishwasher and covering my newly cleaned floor. My Renaissance Girl had used dishwashING liquid instead of dishwashER liquid…sigh.

 

 

 

 

 

Now, just to set the stage, we have a home church and, in anticipation of the extra family and friends we were expecting for the Easter service, I had spent the entire day cleaning and scrubbing and organizing and still had more cleaning and setting up to do as well as coloring eggs and settling little ones in bed for the night before filling Easter baskets.

So I stood there, staring at the billowing disaster and adding a slew of new tasks to my already too-long list, and winged a quick prayer up to my Role Model. Then I threw down a towel levee, plopped my little people down for a good old bubble romp, and grabbed my camera. Disaster-misaster, what we had was a fun Easter memory in the making!

 

That Old Rugged Cross on a lonely hill is a testimony to triumph…life conquering death, good conquering evil, hope conquering fear…justice served and grace given. And that Empty Tomb we celebrate isn’t about death. It’s about life…messy, muddled, mysterious, mistake-ridden life, the kind we live every day…even Easter!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Happy Easter!

 

Related posts:

Jesus, The Gentle Parent

The sWord and The sTone

The Butterfly Effect

Communication vs. Miscommunication

A Return to Childhood

Playground Confessions~Look Who’s Talking!

Toddlers: Teens in the Making

The Measure of Success~Chinese Parents and French Parents Can’t BOTH Be Superior!

 

Award-winnning author, L.R.Knost, is the founder and director of the children's rights advocacy and family consulting group, Little Hearts/Gentle Parenting Resources, and Editor-in-Chief of Holistic Parenting Magazine. Books by L.R.Knost include Whispers Through Time: Communication Through the Ages and Stages of Childhood ; Two Thousand Kisses a Day: Gentle Parenting Through the Ages and Stages ; The Gentle Parent: Positive, Practical, Effective Discipline ; and Jesus, the Gentle Parent: Gentle Christian Parenting the first four books in the Little Hearts Handbook gentle parenting series, and children’s picture books Petey’s Listening Ears and the soon-to-be-released Grumpykins series.


Avenging Childhood~The Change Makers

As I drove out of my driveway this afternoon, I glanced up and saw The Avengers racing around my neighbor’s yard, intent on fighting crime (or each other or the dog or some dragonflies, lol). It made my heart so happy to see childhood…just real, everyday, the-way-children-through-the-ages-have-played kind of childhood at its most honest and robust and carefree. I jumped out of my van and proceeded to confirm my neighbor’s suspicions that I’m a little off my rocker by wildly waving my camera in the air and pointing at her adorable boys roughhousing, silently asking for permission to play paparazzi. She nodded, and the boys hammed it up for me for a few minutes, posing and posturing in their wonderful world of make-believe.

I climbed back into my van amidst my little girls’ giggles (pretty sure they were laughing more at me for taking pictures of the neighbors rather than laughing at the boys’ antics). As we headed off on our afternoon errands, I thought about how the world has changed, but children haven’t. Yes, over time the world will do its share of influencing or corrupting, as the case may be, but children are born children just like they have been since the beginning of time.

 

Every child is born a fresh, new, open book with pages and pages waiting to be filled. Everything is new. Every day is an adventure. Every experience is an opportunity for discovery. Whether they’re boys or girls, whether they have average or advanced or impaired cognitive or motor abilities, whether they’re Asian or Caucasian, Black or Middle Eastern, Hispanic or (as a growing number are worldwide) a unique blend of races and ethnicities, they all start out the same…brand-new, innocent, precious beyond compare.

I am passionate about helping parents fill the first pages of their children’s lives with messages of gentle welcome, of needs met, of trust. I’m equally passionate about helping parents transition into later stages where they are simply there to offer guidance, support, and encouragement as their children begin filling the pages of their lives with their own choices, interests, and gifts.

I’ve heard it said that only those crazy enough to think they can change the world actually do change it. I honestly believe that changing the world starts at home with how we parent our children. Maybe my neighbor is right about me, after all. 🙂

*Book art via Anagram Bookshop*

Related posts:

The sWord and The sTone

The Butterfly Effect

Communication vs. Miscommunication

A Return to Childhood

Playground Confessions~Look Who’s Talking!

Toddlers: Teens in the Making

Jesus, The Gentle Parent

The Measure of Success~Chinese Parents and French Parents Can’t BOTH Be Superior!

 

Award-winnning author, L.R.Knost, is the founder and director of the children's rights advocacy and family consulting group, Little Hearts/Gentle Parenting Resources, and Editor-in-Chief of Holistic Parenting Magazine. Books by L.R.Knost include Whispers Through Time: Communication Through the Ages and Stages of Childhood ; Two Thousand Kisses a Day: Gentle Parenting Through the Ages and Stages ; The Gentle Parent: Positive, Practical, Effective Discipline ; and Jesus, the Gentle Parent: Gentle Christian Parenting the first four books in the Little Hearts Handbook gentle parenting series, and children’s picture books Petey’s Listening Ears and the soon-to-be-released Grumpykins series.